Hi.

Been reading the but around 427.1.7.

Does anyone have any idea on retrospective application?

Is this going to apply to every board change or just adapted to new builds and then as a C3 recommendation for everything else?

Given prices it's going to be a massive cost change on a board swop. Plus, I know for certain I'm going to have space issues with anything over 30 years old here in Fife.

Thoughts?
 
Thats what the plug top fuse is for, literally. A short in the flex will open the fuse within 3 cycles. Though anyone here can correct me on that if not so in practice.

A 13A fuse won't blow on an arc fault though. A fuse takes a relatively long time to open.
 
Maybe we should be pushing for the white goods industry to stop throwing cheaper & cheaper components into their appliances then we wouldn't have this problem!
And that is the problem, accordingly to what I've heard, committee that wrote the standards are made up manufacturers, in white goods industry.
 
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Thats what the plug top fuse is for, literally. A short in the flex will open the fuse within 3 cycles. Though anyone here can correct me on that if not so in practice.
I understood that an AFDD should be detecting an intermittent rapid change in current e.g. a loose connection in L or in N that is arcing (and which would likely not blow any fuse).
 
Do have a time current curve to common BS1363 fuses?
Here is the typical plot, not as well defined as BS88 fuses:
BS1362FusingTime.png
 
I understood that an AFDD should be detecting an intermittent rapid change in current e.g. a loose connection in L or in N that is arcing (and which would likely not blow any fuse).


A parallel L-N or L-E event will blow the fuse.

A series event without an outer screen to earth itself out to would technically require an AFDD, however, I do not believe partially severed cords are behind any number of fires. I aslo do not believe that AFDDs accurately detect dangerous arcing. Cost effective AFDDs will always be a compromise between tripping on dangerous arcing and not tripping on electronics, vacuums, drills and the like. All to often one is indistinguishable from the other and the 1.5-5 amp series current pickup is part of that compromise.
 
A parallel L-N or L-E event will blow the fuse.

A series event without an outer screen to earth itself out to would technically require an AFDD, however, I do not believe partially severed cords are behind any number of fires. I aslo do not believe that AFDDs accurately detect dangerous arcing. Cost effective AFDDs will always be a compromise between tripping on dangerous arcing and not tripping on electronics, vacuums, drills and the like. All to often one is indistinguishable from the other and the 1.5-5 amp series current pickup is part of that compromise.

A brief L-N arc event will not rupture a 13A fuse.
 
A brief L-N arc event will not rupture a 13A fuse.


From what I understand (and could be wrong) a 32 amp MCB has a max Ze of 1.15 ohms or 200 amps of perspective fault current at the furthest point of the socket. 200/13 would be 15 times the rating. Thus 200 amps trips a TDC180 British plug to fuse in under 0.01 seconds.

https://www.eaton.com/content/dam/e...s/data-sheet/eaton-tdc180-fuse-data-sheet.pdf

This is assuming TDC180 fuses are of the same kind used in the UK.
 
This is assuming TDC180 fuses are of the same kind used in the UK.
From above curve, worst-case it is 0.03s at 200A PFC.

I guess the real question is what sort of fault will start a fire but only an AFDD will trip, and how common/likely are they?

In my limited experience of sorting out fixed wiring, the only two cases of a long-term serial arc were light bulb holders in the days of 60W/100W lights and you could sometimes here the buzzing and see the light dim slightly. Yes, those are circuits for which AFDD are not recommended...
 
Does anyone know the figures for the improvement from fitting these devices in Germany? I can't see how any figures could be of value as if a competent person installs an AFDD board they are also going to check the condition of the installation and could remove fire hazards skewing the results.
 

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