and if it's hard wired like most oven are?
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and if it's hard wired like most oven are?
he was thinking you asked for a switch that looks just like a light switch, so thats what he gave you
theres a reason the electrical trade is so heavily regulated and licenced
with the switch in the off position, look at the underside of the switch knob, it'll have:
10A (or 15A/20A)
250V written on it
barney has a point though, theres a good chance the switch mech may have just popped out of the wall plate
Sprint has touched on one of my pet hates, the sale of electrical parts in variety stores.
all of these parts have A disclaimer written on the package that says it needs to be installed by a licensed electrician, so why do we sell them to the general public? most of them wont call a sparky until they blow something up...then we double the price, or introduce the arrogance levy.
when they started this in the early 90's, the trouble i had with pedantic customers not wanting to pay my price for gear. back then i could buy a box of 10 double gpo's for a price that worked out as roughly $11 a piece.
i would carry them around in my van so i could provide quick service to my customers for sometimes months if i didn't get a call on a power point.
i would on-sell them for about 13.50, making a slight profit from my discount at the wholesaler.
some customers would question my price asking why they should pay 13.50 when they could get them for $10 at big w or bunnings. the home builder types were the worst.
they could buy them from bunnings cheaper than i could get them from my wholesaler. the same thing happened with cable, unfortunately it was hard to explain the difference between the cheap stuff they got from bunning (solid core 1mm for lights, which is the minimum) to the stuff i would supply (stranded 1.5mm). stranded cables are a lot more resilient to twisting and rejoining, the cores don't break off as easily and by using 1.5mm, you can load more lights onto a circuit, cutting down on installation time (and repair time) and circuits back to the switchboard, saving on materials. but people just didn't understand, and at the time, the recession was in full swing and everyone was out to undercut the next guy. i couldn't maintain a customer base with the rates i charged and still pay off a mortgage and meet running costs. so i had to fold and ge a real job for another sparky with a huge customer base. 13 and a half years on, still there but not doing light and power anymore, just fixing commercial cooking equipment for restuarants, hotel, clubs and maccas.
a simple post about dumb shop assistants and i tell my life story.
boy did i get carried away!
^^^^what he said, the mech, has probably just dropped out of the switch plate, just pop it back in:D and don't be so heavy handed, who the **** uses them anyway, worst reg, they ever brought out, wire a 30k kitchen and have to fit an ugly switch :mad: customers are never impressed;)
lol tell me about it...... had a job a lil while ago, every time they plugged ANYTHING into one particular GPO it'd trip the RCD on that circuit..... noticed that it was a 2000 series GPO, the rest were all older HPM items...... wanna guess what had happened?
New install? left the MEN point in and put the RCD protected neutrals in the same bar:D seen it done a few times:(
The 2025 couldn't have crapped itself....not clipsal, I like clipsal:eek:
nope
this is end user level stupidity we're talking about here too.......
either got active and neutral a-about which can cause problems with some equipment or he's put the earth in the neutral hole which is certain to trip an rcd.
on older gpo's i've seen ant nests causing an rcd to trip