RCD Discrimination:
The old "Rule of Thumb" (RoT) was that the downstream RCD nominal trip rating should be 3 times larger than the upstream RCD. Although this often provides discrimination it is not guaranteed. It was the RoT that was universally used by Sparks at a time when, although time delay RCDs where in manufacturers catalogues, they were expensive and only available by special order from the manufacturer, so were rarely used and usually only in industrial installations. From the 16th Edition of the Wiring Regulations time delay (S type) RCDs have become increasingly common in domestic installations and today their wider usage has reduced the price close to parity with normal RCDs.
The current Rule of Thumb is the downstream device should be a time delay (S type) RCD and it's nominal trip rating should be 3 times larger than the upstream normal type RCD.