oscar21
Nearly Esteemed
I get how they work and can kind of understand the reasoning, I remember the early "no-trip" RCD testers, D-LOG made one that saturated the RCD core with DC to stop it tripping whilst doing an earth loop test so I agree that stray DC leakeage could stop an RCD tripping.
But, lets say you install a car charger you would protect it with a type A RCD/RCBO but would you also change the main RCD's in the consumer unit if they were AC type because if the car charger does leak DC then it could interfere with the house ones as well. And if it interferes with the household ones, what about next door's RCD's it could also stop them from working couldn't it. how does the DC know to stop propagating down the cables and stopping things from working? Or is it just a pointless reg that has bee brought upon us to keep the coin rolling in.
But, lets say you install a car charger you would protect it with a type A RCD/RCBO but would you also change the main RCD's in the consumer unit if they were AC type because if the car charger does leak DC then it could interfere with the house ones as well. And if it interferes with the household ones, what about next door's RCD's it could also stop them from working couldn't it. how does the DC know to stop propagating down the cables and stopping things from working? Or is it just a pointless reg that has bee brought upon us to keep the coin rolling in.