I'm writing this mainly hoping something occurs to me while writing it!
I got called to an occasionally tripping RCD. It's a Hager double height board, house is about 4 years old, 7 circuits on a type A RCD at top.
Global IR on top row of 0.07M. So fault not present, therefore I could only hope that the low IR was related to the actual fault.
Clamp meter around the RCD tails showed 4ma. Ramp test showed 23ma.
I IR tested all the circuits, L+N to E. Only circuit of interest was kitchen and utility sockets which was 0.07 (obviously still not RCD-trippingly-low).
I found the reason for that (old tumble drier). Then global IR rose to 85M.
Next thing I noticed was when the oven was on, the clamp meter around L and N RCD input shot up to 37ma. And the RCD still didn't trip....
So I thought I'd "help it" with a ramp test. But the ramp test STILL took 23ma to cause a trip. Brain turning to jelly now.
Faulty RCD?
It tripped this morning when they weren't using the oven, and the circuit has 200M IR when the oven is off.
Only other clue is that oil fired boiler was serviced last Thursday, first trip was Thursday night. The boiler circuit had >200M IR (it's wet underfloor heating).
It's tripped again tonight after I sorted out the sockets circuit, and drove away with a healthy global IR.
So I'm thinking
-this is a classic needle in haystack unless I manage to be there when fault is happening
-maybe faulty RCD, still confused by ramp test not tripping quickly when cooker is apparently leaking a lot.
-I should probably have a look inside the boiler next time
-how long do I fight this before converting top row to 7 x RCBO's at ÂŁ21 a pop...
So far the only remotely suspicious thing has been the Beko oven range, and they have agreed to see if it still occurs with it's isolator off but that is rather clutching at straws.
Any other thoughts or diagnostic ideas most welcome!
I got called to an occasionally tripping RCD. It's a Hager double height board, house is about 4 years old, 7 circuits on a type A RCD at top.
Global IR on top row of 0.07M. So fault not present, therefore I could only hope that the low IR was related to the actual fault.
Clamp meter around the RCD tails showed 4ma. Ramp test showed 23ma.
I IR tested all the circuits, L+N to E. Only circuit of interest was kitchen and utility sockets which was 0.07 (obviously still not RCD-trippingly-low).
I found the reason for that (old tumble drier). Then global IR rose to 85M.
Next thing I noticed was when the oven was on, the clamp meter around L and N RCD input shot up to 37ma. And the RCD still didn't trip....
So I thought I'd "help it" with a ramp test. But the ramp test STILL took 23ma to cause a trip. Brain turning to jelly now.
Faulty RCD?
It tripped this morning when they weren't using the oven, and the circuit has 200M IR when the oven is off.
Only other clue is that oil fired boiler was serviced last Thursday, first trip was Thursday night. The boiler circuit had >200M IR (it's wet underfloor heating).
It's tripped again tonight after I sorted out the sockets circuit, and drove away with a healthy global IR.
So I'm thinking
-this is a classic needle in haystack unless I manage to be there when fault is happening
-maybe faulty RCD, still confused by ramp test not tripping quickly when cooker is apparently leaking a lot.
-I should probably have a look inside the boiler next time
-how long do I fight this before converting top row to 7 x RCBO's at ÂŁ21 a pop...
So far the only remotely suspicious thing has been the Beko oven range, and they have agreed to see if it still occurs with it's isolator off but that is rather clutching at straws.
Any other thoughts or diagnostic ideas most welcome!