I have a dual grill element from an electric oven, one circuit of which trips the power when switched on. I have removed this to replace it and have since tested it with an insulation resistance tester. For the good circuit, I get a reading of 500MegOhms, for the supposed "bad" one, 20MegOhms. I am puzzled by this since (a) I read on the internet that element insulation resistance readings are OK if above 1 MegOhm and (b) my calculations suggest to me that 20MegOhm is nowhere near low enough resistance to produce sufficient current to trip an RCD.
Now it gets more puzzling. I bought a replacement element and fitted it. Now the oven trips on the other of the 2 grill circuits. What's more, it trips not just when that grill circuit is turned on, but when any other oven circuit is turned on. I think this is easiest enough to explain - the fault on the new element, if there is one, must be towards the neutral, whereas the fault on the old one was towards the live.
Before I attempt to get the new element replaced, I need to establish that there is actually something wrong with it and thus understand what is an acceptable reading for insulation resistance.
The live to neutral resistance of both circuits on both elements checks out fine against their power ratings - no open or short circuits.
Now it gets more puzzling. I bought a replacement element and fitted it. Now the oven trips on the other of the 2 grill circuits. What's more, it trips not just when that grill circuit is turned on, but when any other oven circuit is turned on. I think this is easiest enough to explain - the fault on the new element, if there is one, must be towards the neutral, whereas the fault on the old one was towards the live.
Before I attempt to get the new element replaced, I need to establish that there is actually something wrong with it and thus understand what is an acceptable reading for insulation resistance.
The live to neutral resistance of both circuits on both elements checks out fine against their power ratings - no open or short circuits.