Won't you need two timers, I think double pole cuts neutral and live?So if that timer above is breaking the neutral circuit surely its doing nothing more than adding an in line neutral timer as I've suggested...whatta you reckon?
That's what I've read, it's an issue with the outlet wiring.It might have been said, I've read about this before fairly recently, what some members thought was that the live and neutral are back to front in the wall or in the unit?
The timer is shutting down the neutral so there's live still leaking in?
I've a led with a digital timer and it goes off completely.
Ok cheers ill see if there's a uk versionThat's what I've read, it's an issue with the outlet wiring.
You'd be much better off to simply make a reverse wiring cable to place between your timer and the wall plug. Swap the hot and neutral. What you are describing seems to be reversed AC wiring to your circuit, so if you simply reverse that again with a short power cable before it gets to the timer, the problem should resolve. $5 fixYep I've got this occurring with a mars ts1000 it also did it with a viparspectra p600....so if we've got a trickle voltage thru the neutral could we break the neutral wire, put a plug on the two ends and put it in another relay timer to flick the neutral off ? Then set the neutral timer 5 mins before and after the live wire timer.
No! Wire the outlet correctly if that's the problem!You'd be much better off to simply make a reverse wiring cable to place between your timer and the wall plug. Swap the hot and neutral. What you are describing seems to be reversed AC wiring to your circuit, so if you simply reverse that again with a short power cable before it gets to the timer, the problem should resolve. $5 fix
Sure you could do that too, and you are correct that is the best solution, but my fix is simpler and does not require calling an electrician. Plus it will tell you whether or not that is the issue before changing your home wiring.No! Wire the outlet correctly if that's the problem!
I got a belt last night checking for loose connections with the plug in the wall but switched off ( switched double)... so I was the voltage tester but dont know if was live or neutral. Thanks for the info. ..ill try swapping the main plug /extension leads live and neutral over....could I do this from the back of the double wall socket and make it a more permenant job? Or would that screw up the ring circuit in the room?Cutting the neutral independently using a second timer is super dangerous, because then you could become the return (ground) much easier every time you touch anything plugged in to that line. Ground is a safety, but without neutral, ground is the only voltage return for the hot line, and electricity will ALWAYS take path of least resistance. That means you standing on moist floor and touching an electrified lamp or other metal surface. Not worth it. Just get one of these to test your outlet, turn off power at the main, check it's actuallyoff with a voltmeter before changing any wires, and simply swap out the neutral and hot or neutral and ground wires or whatever is reversed. Simple, just swapping wires under two screws and done: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Socket-Tester-Polarity-Electrical-Wiring/dp/B013WWKQV0
Just make sure power is off before sticking your tools or fingers in there!! (only millivolts between any combination of the three wires).
What do you mean by double switch? A two-way switch, or to two socket receptacle, or a plug/plate on two side of the same wall (two rooms share same through-wall outlet)? Don't mess with 240v son, or ya gonna get burned! Always turn off entire circuit from the main panel, not just a light switch! If you can't isolate the circuit, or if you suspect and cross wiring between multiple circuits, go find a flashlight and turn the whole house main off if necessary.I got a belt last night checking for loose connections with the plug in the wall but switched off ( switched double)... so I was the voltage tester but dont know if was live or neutral. Thanks for the info. ..ill try swapping the main plug /extension leads live and neutral over....could I do this from the back of the double wall socket and make it a more permenant job? Or would that screw up the ring circuit in the room?
I haven't a clue where the circuit is reversed....but low and behold I just changed over live and neutral in the plug and the lamp switchs off completely on a timer...phew!What do you mean by double switch? A two-way switch, or to two socket receptacle, or a plug/plate on two side of the same wall (two rooms share same through-wall outlet)? Don't mess with 240v son, or ya gonna get burned! Always turn off entire circuit from the main panel, not just a light switch! If you can't isolate the circuit, or if you suspect and cross wiring between multiple circuits, go find a flashlight and turn the whole house main off if necessary.
The plug under question should have "pigtails" that jumper between the wall circuit wire to the plug. All you need to do is swap the correct ones. Again, you need to verify which ones are reversed (if that's even the problem) with a tester like i shared a link for first. Otherwise, you might be swapping the wrong wires, and could kill yourself. A reversed neutral-ground is just as dangerous, because it can electrifies the grounded portions of a fixture/appliamce even when "shut off" at the switch.
It worked..Eureeka!..i reversed the polarity of the plug wires. What a relief...cheers.People are still having this problem? I used to have it with my old 240w Blackstar in 2010 or so. I fixed it by turning the power cord's plug in the wall socket 180 degrees. Yes, it does work. No, I don't know why or how, but it does and did. So just flip that plug.
Nice- glad you're still here to tell us about your success!I haven't a clue where the circuit is reversed....but low and behold I just changed over live and neutral in the plug and the lamp switchs off completely on a timer...phew!