I'd recommend looking at your methods and making whatever changes are needed to reduce the probability of this risk. I've never tripped or tried to trip an RCD via me and I don't intend to. I have had shocks but from internal power supplies within electronics where the unit has to be operating to make tests, not from the mains. It must be 30 years since I had a mains shock and that was when I was an invincible teenager!
I kind of guess your explanation makes a lot of sense Sir.
But here's the thing, Meggers/Fluke/Kewtech testers all measure the trip time and give you the readings which is all very well.
But in the real world these Rcd things are supposed to protect people in situations that I'm describing above. Yet they don't tend to work the same with a human as they do with a machine.
Now I'm only a hobbyist and no way would class myself as an electrician whatsoever, I find electrics fascinating but also have a huge respect towards them.
Yet trusting the readings of a machine is all very well, but in the real world where human life is at stake then this makes me feel a tiny bit uncomfortable.
I'm assuming of course the manufacturers of RCD's test them as well on machines as I can't imagine the companies are paying people to hold on to a live current to measure trip times.
Something just doesn't sit right, and yes it could be a faulty RCD but I'm not talking of once or twice. I'm talking of a few times, even when electricians have been in and done all the tests.
I don't plan on accidently touching anymore, my testing days are over!
Lastly, I have been around electricians since I was 15, I've met and worked alongside a good few. It was always explained to me that an RCD will measure the current going out and the current coming back in. When the balance is broken it is supposed to trip nearly immediately.
Yet it doesn't?