K
Kev2632
What exactly are the neutral leads for? and if a neutral to earth happened on a board with just RCBO'S in it, why doesnt the fault travel along that neutral and affect the other RCBO's?
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Discuss Neutral lead on RCBO'S in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net
Correct.
A borrowed neutral N-E fault will trip both because both neutrals (or shared one) will be connected to earth.
Just to point out that single-module RCBOs are only single-pole switches.
No. Not the ones normally in CUs.
It's not.
That's why it trips when you touch N and E.
No. It's not isolated.
So, if borrowed or connected to another neutral it will divert current from the second RCBO.
Yes...
Yes, because the current is going out through one RCBO and (some of it) back through another - so imbalance.So just to clear this up for the single pole RCBO, in relation to the drawing on page 3- bearing in mind they are single pole RCBO's instead, when we have just a borrowed neutral on RCBO 1 & 2, It will trip both RCBO,
Yes, probably at the same time if lamps on both circuits turned on.when RCBO 1 trips the current will go down through RCBO 1 neutral cable, through the RCBO1 neutral lead and trip RCBO 2 as well yea??
Not sure if you meant now or not.and when we have the borrowed Neutral and neutral to earth fault on RCBO1 it will trip RCBO1 and will it no affect all the other RCBO's as well now??? as the neutral is not isolated from the rest of them??
Yes, probably at the same time if lamps on both circuits turned on.
It's easier to see if you draw the circuit and follow the current path(s).
So the current wont travel back up the supply side of an rcbo then?
Not sure if you meant now or not.
Don't forget that an N-E fault will only trip the RCBO whose neutral has faulted to earth and the one whose neutral is connected to the neutral of the first - not any others because the fault is on the load side and load side neutrals are not connected (except in these fault conditions).
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