Beware fake electric cable, circuit breakers, and plugs.
- adam2
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Beware fake electric cable, circuit breakers, and plugs.
This has been a problem for many years, but appears to be a growing problem.
There are several forms of fakery.
1) the copper conductors are smaller than claimed.
2) The conductors are the correct size but made of low grade copper with a higher resistance.
3) The conductors are copper clad aluminium but are claimed to be copper.
4) The insulation or sheathing is of poor quality and less robust than it should be.
5) Cables claimed to be fire resistant are not.
6) Cable claimed to be low smoke in a fire, do in fact emit smoke.
Also be aware that "100 meter" rolls of cable may be 100 chinese meters or about 90 or 91 meters.
In the case of detachable IEC leads as often used with IT equipment, these are often not earthed, or are not fitted with fuses.
It is well to be vigilant and avoid cable from doubtful sources.
In the absence of test facilities, I would go so far as to assume that the stated size is in Chinese mm, and use the next largest size to compensate for this.
YouTube link to a TV programme about fake cable.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ftUdLnxipi4
There are several forms of fakery.
1) the copper conductors are smaller than claimed.
2) The conductors are the correct size but made of low grade copper with a higher resistance.
3) The conductors are copper clad aluminium but are claimed to be copper.
4) The insulation or sheathing is of poor quality and less robust than it should be.
5) Cables claimed to be fire resistant are not.
6) Cable claimed to be low smoke in a fire, do in fact emit smoke.
Also be aware that "100 meter" rolls of cable may be 100 chinese meters or about 90 or 91 meters.
In the case of detachable IEC leads as often used with IT equipment, these are often not earthed, or are not fitted with fuses.
It is well to be vigilant and avoid cable from doubtful sources.
In the absence of test facilities, I would go so far as to assume that the stated size is in Chinese mm, and use the next largest size to compensate for this.
YouTube link to a TV programme about fake cable.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ftUdLnxipi4
Last edited by adam2 on 17 Mar 2021, 18:40, edited 2 times in total.
Reason: Edited title to add other fake goods.
Reason: Edited title to add other fake goods.
"Installers and owners of emergency diesels must assume that they will have to run for a week or more"
Cheers for that, Adam.
Worth noting that by using a qualified electrician (with properly calibrated test equipment) you can minimize the risks posed by substandard cable.
To elaborate: when a new circuit is designed and installed, it is then tested to ensure that - in the event of a fault - the resistance is low enough to be able to pass enough current to cause the protective device (breaker/fuse) to operate (trip/blow) quickly enough to prevent any problems (fire).
In other words, even if the cable IS substandard, so long as it's installation is tested in accordance with BS 7671, it's unlikely to give any problems.
As for the (red) bit of fake pyro (BS 6387) cable they test in this video... anyone who has ever handled the 'real' stuff should be able to tell the difference with their eyes closed.
All that said, I've had problems with fake cables from China via ebay... 'du-pont' rainbow/ribbon patch leads for logic level prototyping... I was getting weird problems, tested the patch leads and found no continuity... stripped them open to find absolutely NO conductor material at all! They were just coloured solid PVC string.
Worth noting that by using a qualified electrician (with properly calibrated test equipment) you can minimize the risks posed by substandard cable.
To elaborate: when a new circuit is designed and installed, it is then tested to ensure that - in the event of a fault - the resistance is low enough to be able to pass enough current to cause the protective device (breaker/fuse) to operate (trip/blow) quickly enough to prevent any problems (fire).
In other words, even if the cable IS substandard, so long as it's installation is tested in accordance with BS 7671, it's unlikely to give any problems.
As for the (red) bit of fake pyro (BS 6387) cable they test in this video... anyone who has ever handled the 'real' stuff should be able to tell the difference with their eyes closed.
All that said, I've had problems with fake cables from China via ebay... 'du-pont' rainbow/ribbon patch leads for logic level prototyping... I was getting weird problems, tested the patch leads and found no continuity... stripped them open to find absolutely NO conductor material at all! They were just coloured solid PVC string.
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- adam2
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I suspect that most purchasers of fake cable are not even aware that it is from china. The factories making fake goods, including electric cable, will apply whatever marks and approvals are needed for the intended market.vtsnowedin wrote:I can't imagine being a purchaser of cable from China after even one such fault is detected. Is the competitions product just as shoddy making it a moot point?
This would include CE marking, BASEC approval, "made in England" and whatever else is required.
The average small self employed electrician purchases cable in relatively small volumes from the nearest wholesaler or DIY outlet, most check for CE marking.
Larger electrical contractors purchase commonly used types of cable in huge quantities, and might well purchase directly from china subject of course to the cable having all the required approvals and certificates.
Such large firms are most unlikely to listen to employees who express doubts as to the quality of the materials supplied by the employer.
Maintenance contractors primarily maintain existing installations done by others and therefore don't buy much cable.
If they DO need to obtain cable, this is done from the cheapest possible supplier with no regard for quality, beyond checking for approval marks.
"Installers and owners of emergency diesels must assume that they will have to run for a week or more"
- adam2
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I do not share your faith in electricians with calibrated test equipment.Mr. Fox wrote:Cheers for that, Adam.
Worth noting that by using a qualified electrician (with properly calibrated test equipment) you can minimize the risks posed by substandard cable.
To elaborate: when a new circuit is designed and installed, it is then tested to ensure that - in the event of a fault - the resistance is low enough to be able to pass enough current to cause the protective device (breaker/fuse) to operate (trip/blow) quickly enough to prevent any problems (fire).
In other words, even if the cable IS substandard, so long as it's installation is tested in accordance with BS 7671, it's unlikely to give any problems.
As for the (red) bit of fake pyro (BS 6387) cable they test in this video... anyone who has ever handled the 'real' stuff should be able to tell the difference with their eyes closed.
All that said, I've had problems with fake cables from China via ebay... 'du-pont' rainbow/ribbon patch leads for logic level prototyping... I was getting weird problems, tested the patch leads and found no continuity... stripped them open to find absolutely NO conductor material at all! They were just coloured solid PVC string.
Consider as an illustrative example a 32 amp cooker circuit wired in allegedly 4mm cable that is in fact 4 Chinese mm or about 3.6mm actual size.
A competent electrician should test the earth loop impedance of the new circuit so as to ensure that a fault will promptly operate the fuse.
In the case of a relatively short run of cable, then it will still pass the earth loop test, despite being undersized.
The cable is still undersized and if fully loaded might be a fire risk.
The risk is not that great, the regulations do allow a significant safety margin, and cooker circuits are seldom fully loaded for long.
But with millions of meters of fake cable installed the risks add up.
The risk is greater for a circuit that is fully loaded for hours at a time.
The other risk is when through ignorance or penny pinching, the wrong size cable has been fitted.
For example 2.5mm cable on a 32 amp circuit for a cooker is incorrect* In practice one would probably get away with it, unless the 2.5mm cable was in fact only 2.0mm.
And of course no amount of electrical testing will detect "fire resistant" cable that is not fire resistant. No one will know until fire breaks out and the fire alarm/emergency lighting/smoke extract system does not work.
*in general, there may be rare circumstances where it is permissible.
"Installers and owners of emergency diesels must assume that they will have to run for a week or more"
That's why I use words like 'minimise' and 'unlikely'.
Sure, it's conceivable that a very short run circuit loaded to capacity might pose a risk - but with the de-rating factors etc, sizing cable to the 'book' current capacity is rare. If the run is that short, 3.6mm instead of 4mm is unlikely to cause a problem.
More often than not we're sizing (up) for voltage drop.
From memory the 'book' max current carrying capacity of 2.5mm T+E is, what, 31 amps (in free air)? - I'm not aware of circumstances where it is permissible to exceed that (but I'm not infallible!)
The fake pyro would of course not show up in testing - I'm saying that it probably wouldn't even get as far as being installed in the hands of a competent electrician. The stuff they showed in the video was clearly red PVC 3-core, which 'feels' completely different and is different in it construction to pyro.
So all in all I agree that there is a small risk posed by fake cable - just probably not as great as suggested by the TV show - but that this risk can be minimised by using a competent electrician (especially one who has the spectral form of the NICEIC inspector breathing down their neck, looking for that one cable clip you missed because it was 6.45pm on a Friday, you'd dropped the last one you had into the wall cavity of deep, dark oblivion and you had just worked out that the wet feeling on your knees was due to the fact you were actually kneeling in dog piss).
Sure, it's conceivable that a very short run circuit loaded to capacity might pose a risk - but with the de-rating factors etc, sizing cable to the 'book' current capacity is rare. If the run is that short, 3.6mm instead of 4mm is unlikely to cause a problem.
More often than not we're sizing (up) for voltage drop.
From memory the 'book' max current carrying capacity of 2.5mm T+E is, what, 31 amps (in free air)? - I'm not aware of circumstances where it is permissible to exceed that (but I'm not infallible!)
The fake pyro would of course not show up in testing - I'm saying that it probably wouldn't even get as far as being installed in the hands of a competent electrician. The stuff they showed in the video was clearly red PVC 3-core, which 'feels' completely different and is different in it construction to pyro.
So all in all I agree that there is a small risk posed by fake cable - just probably not as great as suggested by the TV show - but that this risk can be minimised by using a competent electrician (especially one who has the spectral form of the NICEIC inspector breathing down their neck, looking for that one cable clip you missed because it was 6.45pm on a Friday, you'd dropped the last one you had into the wall cavity of deep, dark oblivion and you had just worked out that the wet feeling on your knees was due to the fact you were actually kneeling in dog piss).
Yes I think the cable diameter is more related to worst case voltage drop, which the IEE rant over to puff up their status. It is true that filament lamps would dim and kettles would take longer to boil with a drop in supply voltage, but any fire risk is likely to start with one of the hundreds of ultra cheap grub screw connections in series in an installation designed to spec. When we moved into our house, I noticed the hot bakelite/phenol smell in our supply cubboard and saw the supply tails were very hot at full load due to a naff block connection. I rang the suggested supplier number and a quick visit from a dude who could work in the dark and he had swapped the cables for fresh ones, a new meter [for no reason], and left the original badly overheated incoming block with the loose connections....
- BritDownUnder
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They do that in Australia too. They need no excuse to install a smart meter when it is of no benefit to the householder and usually leaves them worse off in terms of tariff.fuzzy wrote:Yes I think the cable diameter is more related to worst case voltage drop, which the IEE rant over to puff up their status. It is true that filament lamps would dim and kettles would take longer to boil with a drop in supply voltage, but any fire risk is likely to start with one of the hundreds of ultra cheap grub screw connections in series in an installation designed to spec. When we moved into our house, I noticed the hot bakelite/phenol smell in our supply cubboard and saw the supply tails were very hot at full load due to a naff block connection. I rang the suggested supplier number and a quick visit from a dude who could work in the dark and he had swapped the cables for fresh ones, a new meter [for no reason], and left the original badly overheated incoming block with the loose connections....
I would think that voltage drop is related to cable resistance (more correctly impedance for AC) and resistance is a function of both diameter of conductor and also length. Which is more significant I can't say as I would have to go and put on my maths hat and we don't want that.
G'Day cobber!
@ Fuzzy:
Yep, loose terminations is a major issue - the whole reason the regs were amended recently to insist on metal cased consumer units was because there were a fair few plastic ones that caught fire... but that was down to 'factory' installed cabling (neutral bus bars, IIRC) not being tightened sufficiently (and installers not checking).
@ BritDU:
Also a function of current, too. Voltage drop tables for each cable cross sectional area (c.s.a.) are given in millivolts (mV) per amp per meter e.g. 2.5mm csa drops 18 mV per metre per amp. The maximum drop limits are 8% for lighting circuits and 6% power for power circuits (for a 'private distribution').
On PV we always worked to 3% on the DC side. I can't remember if that was a reg, guidance or just us.
Yep, loose terminations is a major issue - the whole reason the regs were amended recently to insist on metal cased consumer units was because there were a fair few plastic ones that caught fire... but that was down to 'factory' installed cabling (neutral bus bars, IIRC) not being tightened sufficiently (and installers not checking).
@ BritDU:
Also a function of current, too. Voltage drop tables for each cable cross sectional area (c.s.a.) are given in millivolts (mV) per amp per meter e.g. 2.5mm csa drops 18 mV per metre per amp. The maximum drop limits are 8% for lighting circuits and 6% power for power circuits (for a 'private distribution').
On PV we always worked to 3% on the DC side. I can't remember if that was a reg, guidance or just us.
- adam2
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This problem is ongoing.
The latest concern is fake flexible cord
"Ermaks" and made in Turkey.
http://www.aci.org.uk/news/aci-warns-da ... xible-cord
The alleged 2.5mm copper flexible cord when tested only had a safe current carrying capacity equal to about 1mm of real copper cable.
That could be a significant fire risk in use.
The fake cable contains copper coated aluminium which is not only of much lower current carrying capacity, but is also less robust and liable to breakage.
The latest concern is fake flexible cord
"Ermaks" and made in Turkey.
http://www.aci.org.uk/news/aci-warns-da ... xible-cord
The alleged 2.5mm copper flexible cord when tested only had a safe current carrying capacity equal to about 1mm of real copper cable.
That could be a significant fire risk in use.
The fake cable contains copper coated aluminium which is not only of much lower current carrying capacity, but is also less robust and liable to breakage.
"Installers and owners of emergency diesels must assume that they will have to run for a week or more"
- adam2
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Fake 13 amp plugs are again infesting the lower end of the market. They may be sold with fake flexible cord attached.
Common dangers are;
Plug is not fitted with a fuse, or is fitted with a fake fuse not connected to anything.
Body of plug is too small with the pins too near the edge and thus touchable.
The earth pin is partly insulated and wont make contact in some sockets.
And of course grossly undersized wire is often fitted.
The fakes are often fitted to goods sold on fleabay and by the dodgy tax avoiders.
More details herehttp://bs1363.fatallyflawed.org.uk/
Common dangers are;
Plug is not fitted with a fuse, or is fitted with a fake fuse not connected to anything.
Body of plug is too small with the pins too near the edge and thus touchable.
The earth pin is partly insulated and wont make contact in some sockets.
And of course grossly undersized wire is often fitted.
The fakes are often fitted to goods sold on fleabay and by the dodgy tax avoiders.
More details herehttp://bs1363.fatallyflawed.org.uk/
"Installers and owners of emergency diesels must assume that they will have to run for a week or more"
Interesting. Thing that I often wonder about 'crap' products, is how much cheaper/more profitable it is to make a crap product than a half decent one. I see it a lot with Silverline tools. Nine times out of ten they are junk due to small design faults or poor quality materials. It can't cost significantly more to make it better. It's almost as if the market requires a 'junk' product against which the half decent product can be priced against.adam2 wrote: More details herehttp://bs1363.fatallyflawed.org.uk/
Both online marketplaces have gone downhill in the last 10 years, with poor search facilities and tolerating a lot of lying from overseas sellers. It should be impossible to choose 'UK supplier' and then find you are being shipped from China etc. Big river is constantly trying to trick you into paying postage charges, or sign you for unwanted schemes. I haven't used them for a long time.
- emordnilap
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I keep telling people “never use Amazon� but laziness trumps ethics (and safety in this case�.fuzzy wrote:I haven't used them for a long time.
We’re still reeling from giving billions of free money to incompetent private bankers - yet the people paying this debt still insist on giving tax avoiders money for such dangerous junk.
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker