What Lionels said.
That electrician you got sounds to be very lazy.
There is a thing we call fault finding. It's tripping so lets go and find out the origin of the problem.
Look if your oven is broken, old and looks the part to be replaced, then by all means do so. I would look firstly at the elements, those who tend to get a bit of moisture / splatter from baking & cooking. Do insulation tests on them and move on from there. It could even be the supply cable to the oven that is the problem.
We had a client which complained that as soon as they used the iron the earth leakage would trip.
So they replaced the iron. About 4 irons later, each more expensive than the last, they asked that we come to separate the circuits on the house cause with original installation they wired everything underneath earth leakage. So creating a essential side and non-essential side, everything still under earth leakage, the iron tripped a earth leakage again. Luckily not the rest of the house, fridge/freezer etc. cause of the separation.
So we went to do fault finding and eventually after making sure nothing is plugged in and having done an insulation resistance test, found there was a problem on the circuit. We then disconnected all the plug sockets and found that the one where the iron was plugged into had moisture in the back, possibly damp rising (and the rest of the sockets on the same outside wall) Luckily the wire supplying the circuit was fine.
So yes, you might change the oven, but the problem could also be with the rest of the circuit feeding the oven. Good place to start, the elements and then work your way back to the origin of the supply.
That electrician you got sounds to be very lazy.
There is a thing we call fault finding. It's tripping so lets go and find out the origin of the problem.
Look if your oven is broken, old and looks the part to be replaced, then by all means do so. I would look firstly at the elements, those who tend to get a bit of moisture / splatter from baking & cooking. Do insulation tests on them and move on from there. It could even be the supply cable to the oven that is the problem.
We had a client which complained that as soon as they used the iron the earth leakage would trip.
So they replaced the iron. About 4 irons later, each more expensive than the last, they asked that we come to separate the circuits on the house cause with original installation they wired everything underneath earth leakage. So creating a essential side and non-essential side, everything still under earth leakage, the iron tripped a earth leakage again. Luckily not the rest of the house, fridge/freezer etc. cause of the separation.
So we went to do fault finding and eventually after making sure nothing is plugged in and having done an insulation resistance test, found there was a problem on the circuit. We then disconnected all the plug sockets and found that the one where the iron was plugged into had moisture in the back, possibly damp rising (and the rest of the sockets on the same outside wall) Luckily the wire supplying the circuit was fine.
So yes, you might change the oven, but the problem could also be with the rest of the circuit feeding the oven. Good place to start, the elements and then work your way back to the origin of the supply.
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