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westward10

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We had some old rcd testers in the office so I bought them home to see if they still function. Tester 1 no trip, tester 2 no trip go to my consumer unit and hit the test button no trip, shock horror how long
[ElectriciansForums.net] There is still life in it.
has it been like that. Today I performed surgery and fitted a new device and it lives on.
 
Love these old style hand-held testers
I wish I could figure out why this one doesn’t work. It was a great tester and the first “expensive” one I ever owned!
No signs of life at all, nothing screamingly obvious I could see wrong, so probably beyond me to fix!
[ElectriciansForums.net] There is still life in it.
[ElectriciansForums.net] There is still life in it.
 
Same fitment as current starbreaker, surely?

First link I saw was screwfix. Oddly enough you can buy one from them in a board, for less than they sell them individually.
I'm not sure I just put the part no in but it is three module wide so I suspect the new style won't fit.
 
Newer units are all two wide, but busbar spacing would surely allow one to be fitted with a blank?

Just curious to know if starbreaker compatibility has remained unchanged over the years.
Mcbs and rcbos are still compatible you can see I have newer mcbs in mine the originals were broken. A two module wouldn't fit as the busbar is fixed with socket points to plug in, one picks up the non rcd busbar the other to the outgoing rcd side there is nothing inbetween.
 
Mcbs and rcbos are still compatible you can see I have newer mcbs in mine the originals were broken. A two module wouldn't fit as the busbar is fixed with socket points to plug in, one picks up the non rcd busbar the other to the outgoing rcd side there is nothing inbetween.
Of course. I was picturing a solid busbar, which obviously isn't going to be found in a split board.
 
I wish I could figure out why this one doesn’t work. It was a great tester and the first “expensive” one I ever owned!
No signs of life at all, nothing screamingly obvious I could see wrong, so probably beyond me to fix!
View attachment 102338
View attachment 102337
Most of the time and this goes for any tester it is the switch contacts that go bad first. It is usually dirty or corroded contact to the power on circuit.
 
Unsolder the old ones, and fit good quality new ones of the same voltage and capacitance They're not expensive.
This doesn't look to be a circuit where the electrolytics are as stressed as in some, but they do have a limited life, and a blanket replacement is often easier than careful independent testing of each one.
 
Unsolder the old ones, and fit good quality new ones of the same voltage and capacitance They're not expensive.
This doesn't look to be a circuit where the electrolytics are as stressed as in some, but they do have a limited life, and a blanket replacement is often easier than careful independent testing of each one.
Thanks for some reason I read your post as “charge”not “change”. Makes sense now! Cheers
 
Have you checked that little fuse if there’s no life at all?

Oh no… you can’t… your tester’s bust.
:)
Yep, fuse checked, 9v applied straight to the two main battery lugs, all contacts cleaned.
Sad as it is, I don't think it's worth spending long on. I have multiple alternative testers, this one just had a bit of sentimental attachment being my first ever decent tester!
 

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