Working on cars very often involves the use of
power tools. Electric drills, electric jigsaws, electric sanders, soldering
irons – all are mains-powered. When you consider that each of these tools has
the ability to cut, sand or burn its way through the power cord, you can see why
it’s very important that a ‘safety switch’ – a residual current device – is in
use. You can buy safety switches that are installed on the main meter board or
you can buy portable ones that are integrated into a multi-outlet power-board.
But how do you know that they work?
I was recently working on a mains-powered car
battery charger. In my stupidity I forgot to switch it off at the outlet -
instead I switched off at the charger itself...which isn’t of much use when you
then pull the (live) switch out of the box! So I got a real kick from the switch
– the power travelled down my fingers, down my arm and then through my body to
the ground I was sitting on. That’s exactly the situation in which a safety
switch is designed to trip, turning off the power in 30 – 40 milliseconds,
before the electricity has a chance to do you damage.
And before starting work on the charger, I’d been
careful to plug it into a portable safety switch. But the switch didn’t
trip!
So how do you know that your life is being
protected? In houses and workshops where the safety switch is installed on the
main power board, how do you know that each power point is protected? How do you
know that a portable safety switch actually works? Despite all safety switches
having a ‘test’ button, self-testing can be flawed – really, you need an
external checker to be absolutely confident.
The answer is to build a safety switch checker.
Warning!
This
story is based around Australian 240V AC mains power systems. The instructions
for building the Safety Switch Tester are specific to Australia, Australian
regulations and Australian power outlet configurations. Unless you have a high
level of expertise with mains power systems, you should not apply this
information to non-Australian mains power wiring. In some Australian states,
working on mains powered devices may be illegal.
Building
the Safety Switch Tester involves dealing with mains power wiring. Never work
on the circuit while it is plugged in to a power socket. Mains-rated wiring
must be used and a high level of workmanship employed.
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Building a Safety Switch Tester
It sounds like it’d be really complicated to build
a device for testing safety switches but actually it’s pretty easy. That’s
because Silicon Chip magazine has detailed how to build one and basically
it’s just a few neon indicators, a pushbutton and some resistors. It’s covered
at Silicon Chip's "Build A Safety Switch Checker"
and I recommend
that in addition to this article, you also read that text.
The parts needed are:
1 x 3-pin plugpack case (Jaycar HB-5900 or
equivalent)
1 x 250VAC plastic momentary pushbutton switch
(Jaycar SP-0716 or equivalent)
2 x plastic neon bezels with in-built resistors
(Jaycar SL-2630 or equivalent)
2 x 2.2kΩ 5W wirewound resistors
1 x 1.5kΩ 5W wirewound resistor
You’ll also need some AC rated hook-up wire,
heatshrink, silicone and some other bits and pieces like cable ties.
This diagram, reproduced from the Silicon Chip
article with permission, shows you all the wiring. When doing the wiring, take
great care to get the layout correct, and insulate exposed 240V connections.
The one I built differs a fraction from the
Silicon Chip parts layout in that I placed the string of three resistors down
the bottom and covered them completely with heatshrink. They’re held in place
with a few dobs of Silastic.
Once the wiring is done, the two halves of the
enclosure are held together with the supplied screws.
Using the Safety Switch Tester
The left-hand neon indicates if there’s a valid
earth connection. If there is (and on every power outlet there should be!), the
neon will glow when power is switched on. The right-hand neon indicator shows
that power is available from the power outlet.
When the test button is pressed and the safety
switch is working correctly, both neons will immediately go off.
If the safety switch is not working correctly, or
none is connected, the right-hand neon will go out but not the left-hand
one.
So, when you turn on power you want to see two
neons; when you press the button on a circuit equipped with a safety switch, you
want to see both neons go out.
Simple, huh? And once you’ve built a safety switch
tester, it’s also a good device to lend to your friends so they can test their
own systems...
How a Safety Switch Works
Mains
power systems comprise three conductors: Active, Neutral and Earth. When a power
tool (or anything else drawing power) is working normally, the current flow to
the tool through the Active is the same as the current flow back in the Neutral
wire. But if there is a fault, power might be returning not through the Neutral
but instead through Earth.
That
could be the case because (a) there is an insulation fault inside the appliance,
or (b) the power is flowing to Earth through your body! In either case, you want
the power switched off ASAP.
The
Safety Switch monitors the current flows in the Active and Neutral conductors
and switches off the power if there’s a difference in these current flows.
Note:
a safety switch cannot protect you if you get across the Active and Neutral
connections – it won’t be able to tell that the power is going through you and
not the appliance! However, it will protect you if you are between Active and
Earth – that’s if the Safety Switch works, of course!
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