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Thread: Anyone Had A New House Built Between 2010 and 2013

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    Anyone Had A New House Built Between 2010 and 2013

    There is a recall in action for faulty electrical cabling in up to 40,000 new homes and commercial buildings, built between 2010 to 13.

    What a massive recall. Basically, any building that has the faulty cable fitted will have to have all wiring replaced!

    I wonder who will wear the cost? It will be enormous.

    https://www.accc.gov.au/update/infin...e-its-too-late

    ACCC warns Infinity electrical cables could become dangerous within two years - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

    I have a roll of cable in the shed which I knew was dated 2012. Luckily for me, after a quick check it is not the affected brand, as some has been used in my house and caravan.
    Dave.

    I was asked " Is it ignorance or apathy?" I replied "I don't know and I don't care."


    1983 RR gone (wish I kept it)
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    Old news:
    Why we should buy Australian

    Even older news, do you want to talk about cladding on apartments in Southbank?
    Docklands apartment fire: hundreds of high-rise towers to be investigated for fire danger

    And I could tell you some stories about circuit breakers that don't trip and cause fires. Guess where they are made.

    You either pay for quality or pay even more for less quality.

  3. #3
    cuppabillytea's Avatar
    cuppabillytea is offline Loud Mouthed Rat Bag Gold Subscriber
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mick_Marsh View Post
    Old news:
    Why we should buy Australian

    Even older news, do you want to talk about cladding on apartments in Southbank?
    Docklands apartment fire: hundreds of high-rise towers to be investigated for fire danger

    And I could tell you some stories about circuit breakers that don't trip and cause fires. Guess where they are made.

    You either pay for quality or pay even more for less quality.
    It would be good if you could put an auto link on all of these threads, referring back to your original thread about why we should buy Australian Mick.
    Cheers, Billy.
    Keeping it simple is complicated.

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    I am a bit confused about this.

    When wiring is placed in a house it just sits there and doesn't move.

    As I understand it the bad wiring becomes brittle but doesn't fall apart, so if it doesn't move what is the danger?

    Many houses went for even a hundred years with old cloth insulation and yes when disturbed some burnt down but generally they didn't unless something happened like overload of the wiring.
    My parent's house was built in 1926 and was rewired in about 1970 which is 44years with cloth insulation . I have seen some places with china switches still.
    Regards Philip A

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    Quote Originally Posted by Mick_Marsh View Post
    Old news:
    Why we should buy Australian

    Even older news, do you want to talk about cladding on apartments in Southbank?
    Docklands apartment fire: hundreds of high-rise towers to be investigated for fire danger
    Mick feel free to delete this thread. I only heard about it two days ago from an email from Middys, as I have an account with them.
    Dave.

    I was asked " Is it ignorance or apathy?" I replied "I don't know and I don't care."


    1983 RR gone (wish I kept it)
    1996 TDI ES.
    2003 TD5 HSE
    1987 Isuzu County

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    JDNSW's Avatar
    JDNSW is offline RoverLord Silver Subscriber
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    Quote Originally Posted by PhilipA View Post

    As I understand it the bad wiring becomes brittle but doesn't fall apart, so if it doesn't move what is the danger?
    My understanding is that it actually does fall apart.

    And perhaps worth pointing out that the cloth/rubber wiring was installed in conduit, which protected it from moving and from physical impact, as well as limiting the amount of air that could get to it. With the modern cabling, the outer sheath has to provide the same function as the conduit used to.

    John
    John

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    1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol

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    Quote Originally Posted by PhilipA View Post
    I am a bit confused about this.

    When wiring is placed in a house it just sits there and doesn't move.

    As I understand it the bad wiring becomes brittle but doesn't fall apart, so if it doesn't move what is the danger?

    Many houses went for even a hundred years with old cloth insulation and yes when disturbed some burnt down but generally they didn't unless something happened like overload of the wiring.
    My parent's house was built in 1926 and was rewired in about 1970 which is 44years with cloth insulation . I have seen some places with china switches still.
    Regards Philip A
    All old news,as others have said.

    The insulation on the cable perishes,falls off, and the copper is exposed,not real good if you get up in the ceiling to do something.

    Actually live cables with perished insulation are not good and extremely dangerous wherever they are.

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    Just to be a bit thorough I had a look at the ACCC site which has videos of the cable failure mode.

    https://www.accc.gov.au/update/infin...e-its-too-late

    You will see that they bake the cable in an oven and then bend it 180 degrees before it breaks and it snaps in one break, it does not disintegrate. I wonder how many times cable will be disturbed and then bent double after being in a hot place such as a roof.


    So maybe that is why not many people are lining up to have their wiring replaced.
    Regards Philip A

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    Degradation of the insulation over time is the issue,and it will be accelerated with heat.
    Heat in a ceiling space is often at least 20 degrees above ambient.

    Many electrical contractors that used the brand all of a sudden had new ABN numbers

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    Yes, the testing with heat and bending is accelerated - and I have no doubt that the testing was started to investigate reported failures.

    The temperature in the roof space can easily be twenty degrees above ambient, ambient in many places in Australia can fairly often reach the high thirties - and the actual wiring can easily get substantially hotter, due to the heating effect of the current flowing through it. Especially if the wire is partly buried in insulation and a bit overloaded.

    John
    John

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