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Borrowed Neutral
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<blockquote data-quote="user 6351" data-source="post: 84391" data-attributes="member: 6351"><p>Tom, thanks for that... a very good point that I didn't cover.</p><p></p><p>Yes, you do still have a borrowed neutral, but it was a quick and dirty fix to stop the RCD tripping and keep the tenant at the time happy.</p><p></p><p>I'm the only person likely to do any work on the setup, so I wasn't too worried about leaving it temporarily, and I was sort of relying on the RCD doing its' job if the tenants started playing silly beggars.</p><p></p><p>I'm actually back there again today to do something else, and having checked out the demand etc, I intend to put both the circuits onto the one breaker.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="user 6351, post: 84391, member: 6351"] Tom, thanks for that... a very good point that I didn't cover. Yes, you do still have a borrowed neutral, but it was a quick and dirty fix to stop the RCD tripping and keep the tenant at the time happy. I'm the only person likely to do any work on the setup, so I wasn't too worried about leaving it temporarily, and I was sort of relying on the RCD doing its' job if the tenants started playing silly beggars. I'm actually back there again today to do something else, and having checked out the demand etc, I intend to put both the circuits onto the one breaker. [/QUOTE]
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