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B

brizospark

Have had one of them days. I had a board change to do and a few other bits and bobs so everything was going great until I tried to put power back on.

Basically I have replaced a 3036 board with a split load Wylex board. One half of the board is working fine but the other half's RCD is tripping as soon as anything is plugged into it.

If I remove all plugs from sockets then the RCD holds but as soon as I plug anything in, kettle, sky box, TV, it trips instantly. On this side of the board is the cooker, 1 x lighting circuit and 2 x ring mains, funny enough the RCD isn't tripping when the lighting circuit or cooker is on.

Now I have checked that I have neutrals from correct circuits going to the correct neutral bar, several times and these are OK. I tried replacing the RCD itself with the one that was OK and it still tripped. What else is strange is that the kitchen ring is on the side of the board which is fine but if I plug anything into a kitchen socket the RCD which isnt even protecting this is tripping!! I opened up sockets and everything looked OK but it was getting late on so I replaced the offending RCD with a main switch I had in van just so the couple have power on tonight before I go back again tomorrow. Switched on with RCD removed and everything fine.

Anyone had experience with this problem before? Any advice much appreciated
 
Could there be a borrowed neutral at that kitchen socket itself. Turn the rcd off covering that socket and turn other rcd on. Test between n-e at the problematic socket and if its showing voltage to earth it's a borrowed neutral! Sounds like a fault I would love to find!
 
Could there be a borrowed neutral at that kitchen socket itself. Turn the rcd off covering that socket and turn other rcd on. Test between n-e at the problematic socket and if its showing voltage to earth it's a borrowed neutral! Sounds like a fault I would love to find!

It's not just this kitchen socket it is any socket in house covered by either RCD
 
What's confusing me is why when I plug anything into kitchen socket covered by RCD A is it tripping RCD B? Surely this means it can't be a N to E fault as it would trip RCD B if this was the case

If you have an NE fault on a circuit on one RCD then loading a circuit on the other RCD can cause the first RCD to trip.
Did a diagram for you:
[ElectriciansForums.net] Nightmare of a day. RCD tripiing under any load
 
Every time we get a thread about RCD's tripping after a CU change, the common consensus is either a N-E fault or a shared/borrowed neutral. And every single time the OP has failed to test the installation prior to replacing the old rewirable CU with one containing at least two RCD's.

How many more times do these guy's NEED to be told to test these installations before they start changing them out for god's sake??

What's more, why is this fault causing such a problem to find and rectify. I would have thought that in around an hour, an experienced electrician would have sorted this problem out, ...or at the very least well on his way to finishing off any remedial work...
 
Eng54 do you honestly think in the real world customers would give the go ahead to carry out testing before changing a board? This would mean an additional cost on top of a board change The customer would simply get someone else to do the job!
 
A test for borrowed neutrals plus an IR plus an EFLI wouldn't take very long at all would it?
You've already done enough there to identify any major problems and you're doing the rest of the tests anyway on completion of the change so what's the problem?
 

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