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pc1966

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Many years ago I fitted some RCD socket outlets to my parents home for the two likely to be used outside, the front hall and the kitchen one next to the window. Being the paranoid sort of person I am I always test-trip them when I have cause to use one, and in the case of the front hall that is any time helping out with hoovering. Yesterday it failed to trip so today included a trip to Toolstation for a modern replacement. I wondered how old it was so opened it up out of curiosity and found a couple of 1989 date-codes, so not too bad to have lasted for 32 years energised.
[ElectriciansForums.net] Failed RCD socket given post-mortem out of curiosity
[ElectriciansForums.net] Failed RCD socket given post-mortem out of curiosity
[ElectriciansForums.net] Failed RCD socket given post-mortem out of curiosity
[ElectriciansForums.net] Failed RCD socket given post-mortem out of curiosity
[ElectriciansForums.net] Failed RCD socket given post-mortem out of curiosity
In the last one you can see the light-grey VDR included for surge protection (lightning would blow the PCB tracks I guess as "ultimate fuse") just above the bridge rectifier, and the three parallel 120K dropper resistors taking the 340-ish volts crudely smoothed DC from that down to something like 15V for the 741 op-amp. Adjustable trip as well!
 
Many years ago I fitted some RCD socket outlets to my parents home for the two likely to be used outside, the front hall and the kitchen one next to the window. Being the paranoid sort of person I am I always test-trip them when I have cause to use one, and in the case of the front hall that is any time helping out with hoovering. Yesterday it failed to trip so today included a trip to Toolstation for a modern replacement. I wondered how old it was so opened it up out of curiosity and found a couple of 1989 date-codes, so not too bad to have lasted for 32 years energised.
View attachment 104794
View attachment 104795
View attachment 104796
View attachment 104797
View attachment 104798
In the last one you can see the light-grey VDR included for surge protection (lightning would blow the PCB tracks I guess as "ultimate fuse") just above the bridge rectifier, and the three parallel 120K dropper resistors taking the 340-ish volts crudely smoothed DC from that down to something like 15V for the 741 op-amp. Adjustable trip as well!

Good old 741 op amps. I wonder how many of those have been sold over the years!

Any of the capacitors bulging?
 
Did you manage to fit that in a flush mounted box dating back over several decades?
The original socket was single gang, at the time those RCD sockets were all dual-gang so mounted in a surface box. I could have gone back to single gang now, but then I would have to reinstate a back-box and, more seriously, fill the screw hols and repaint around it as 30 years on it ain't going to look good underneath. Below is the replacement:

[ElectriciansForums.net] Failed RCD socket given post-mortem out of curiosity
 
Good old 741 op amps. I wonder how many of those have been sold over the years!
Must be one of the most successful ICs of all time, not just the '741' but all of the upgrades that followed with JFET or MOSFET inputs, etc.
Any of the capacitors bulging?
No electrolytic used, only "big" capacitor is a tantalum bead (yellow thing next to the trim-pot). The only concession to cost seems to be a single-side PCB with the occasional pink wire link. The use of tantalum cap and metal film or metal oxide resistors is good, so partly explaining its 32 years operating life!
 
Can't see the new one lasting 32 years. Can't even get a floodlight to last over 3 sometimes now
Very true, but my parents won't last that long either :(

Really the house could do with being rewired as it is still mostly imperial cable (since it was rewired a little before they moved in 1972, with the odd bit added/modified in the kitchen in the 80s) along with a new CU so RCD protected at source, but that would be a nightmare for me and my parents (for opposing reasons) and given this at least ticks the box for RCD protection where most needed, it will keep them going for as long as necessary.
 
Very true, but my parents won't last that long either :(

Really the house could do with being rewired as it is still mostly imperial cable (since it was rewired a little before they moved in 1972, with the odd bit added/modified in the kitchen in the 80s) along with a new CU so RCD protected at source, but that would be a nightmare for me and my parents (for opposing reasons) and given this at least ticks the box for RCD protection where most needed, it will keep them going for as long as necessary.

The world is not a perfect world. DPG 2022.
 
When I first saw the board and before I read your comment, I took C1 to be the dropper, but a quick look at the tracks revealed that to be entirely R2, totalling 40k on the DC side of the bridge. So there's around 5mA available to power the amplifier at whatever voltage that zener is. One the one hand, a resistive dropper is wasteful. A 0.1ÎĽF cap could have saved something approaching a watt of dissipation and relative to the overall cost it's not a huge extra. But then, unless it was vastly overrated for voltage making it bigger and more expensive still, it would have suffered the same fate as most X-cap droppers, losing capacitance through repeated self-heal events and stopped the unit working after much less than 30 years.

The actuator coil seems to be powered separately by half-wave rectified AC (across one diode of the bridge) via that 47k (R3?), and flywheeled by D9. That scheme makes sense because it utilises the coil's inductance to reduce the resistor loss for a given average coil current, compared to feeding it from the bridge DC output. I can't see what actually trips it - is it shorted by the op-amp's output?
 
When I first saw the board and before I read your comment, I took C1 to be the dropper, but a quick look at the tracks revealed that to be entirely R2, totalling 40k on the DC side of the bridge. So there's around 5mA available to power the amplifier at whatever voltage that zener is. One the one hand, a resistive dropper is wasteful. A 0.1ÎĽF cap could have saved something approaching a watt of dissipation and relative to the overall cost it's not a huge extra. But then, unless it was vastly overrated for voltage making it bigger and more expensive still, it would have suffered the same fate as most X-cap droppers, losing capacitance through repeated self-heal events and stopped the unit working after much less than 30 years.

The actuator coil seems to be powered separately by half-wave rectified AC (across one diode of the bridge) via that 47k (R3?), and flywheeled by D9. That scheme makes sense because it utilises the coil's inductance to reduce the resistor loss for a given average coil current, compared to feeding it from the bridge DC output. I can't see what actually trips it - is it shorted by the op-amp's output?
Oh Lucien. It was fully explained in post #11 you silly bean.
 

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