Hi folks,
Earlier today my wife got a shock from one of the light switches when turning the light off
Luckily she's fine, not more than a sore finger and tingling for a while afterwards
We took the light switch apart and everything seems fairly normal. It's a double switch controlling two sets of lights
The live wires all seems solidly in the terminals
The 4 neutrals were all in one terminal block covered in electrical tape, again they all seemed solid
The 4 earth wires were in the same terminal block (different terminal), again all solid. The earth wires from the metal back box goes to the same terminal block and also seems solid in the terminal
No signs of exposed wiring on the live or neutral wires, or scorching or melting on the switch itself. The switch works fine, so evidence of sticking which would imply a short
There were some exposed bits of the earth wires where the sheathing didn't fully cover it. But no sign of damage to the earth wires
Tbh, we're a bit mystified as to what could have gone wrong
We've wrapped the exposed earth wires in electrical tape just to be sure. Also replaced the tape around the terminal block for ten neutral and earth wires, and put some tape in between the two just to add some separation
Also put some tape over the screws on the switch to give some isolation from anything conductive
Anyone got any ideas? Is it advisable to replace the switch or get an electrician to be on the safe side?
We also noticed there's no RCD on the lighting circuits (except bathroom lights). Is that normal? I thought RCDs were required on all circuits, we just have them on sockets and the appliances?