B
Bessie
My customer's house has two consumer units connected in parallel. The first one supplies several ring circuits and already had an RCD. The second supplies several lighting circuits, washing machine, microwave, boiler and immersion heater - until I upgraded it, there was no RCD, just a 100A switch.
I checked insulation resistance on both boards before fitting the RCD - all circuits tested out OK, although one circuit on the board with the new RCD was a tiny bit under 2MOhm. Also tested the new RCD, likewise OK. I thought the job was done however customer rang the next day to say the new RCD keeps tripping.
Sure enough, half the times he turns on the microwave the RCD trips. Fair enough, maybe the RCD is faulty after all and a bit over sensitive, but what I can't understand is that when he boils the kettle on the kitchen ring circuit (remember, this circuit is connected to the other board via its own RCD) the new RCD trips even though it doesn't protect this circuit and belongs in a different board!
Is this a recognised phenomenon? Does anyone now what is going on here?
Thanks.
I checked insulation resistance on both boards before fitting the RCD - all circuits tested out OK, although one circuit on the board with the new RCD was a tiny bit under 2MOhm. Also tested the new RCD, likewise OK. I thought the job was done however customer rang the next day to say the new RCD keeps tripping.
Sure enough, half the times he turns on the microwave the RCD trips. Fair enough, maybe the RCD is faulty after all and a bit over sensitive, but what I can't understand is that when he boils the kettle on the kitchen ring circuit (remember, this circuit is connected to the other board via its own RCD) the new RCD trips even though it doesn't protect this circuit and belongs in a different board!
Is this a recognised phenomenon? Does anyone now what is going on here?
Thanks.