Hello all
I have recently installed a sub main in 4mm 3-core SWA, approx length 45 metres, to feed a small garden office.
Final circuits in the cabin are protected by 30mA RCBOs and the supply is fed from a 32A MCB on the non-RCD side of the DB in the house. As the installation is TT I put in another earth rod at the cabin and go satisfactory readings (below 40ohms). There is a 100mA up front RCD at the house (not S-type).
I tested everything before leaving (still need to go back to finish the job but it’s in Sussex and I am London so can’t go back until January). All was fine in the cabin and got good readings on the supply cable for IR between all conductors, no continuity between conductors, good R1+R2. Energised everything, lights on, power on - all ok.
The next day I get a call saying the power has tripped out in the house at the incoming RCD. My first thought was a N-E fault on the sub-main but was confused as all had tested ok before I left. The main switch in the cabin was off, and after a few more days of nuisance tripping multiple times a day, I explained how to disconnect N and E from the DB (bloke is competent, just not a spark) and this seems to have cleared the fault for now.
It would be good to hear if anyone can elucidate further or has had a similar issue before? Does the fact the up front RCD is not time delayed make any difference?
Many thanks.
I have recently installed a sub main in 4mm 3-core SWA, approx length 45 metres, to feed a small garden office.
Final circuits in the cabin are protected by 30mA RCBOs and the supply is fed from a 32A MCB on the non-RCD side of the DB in the house. As the installation is TT I put in another earth rod at the cabin and go satisfactory readings (below 40ohms). There is a 100mA up front RCD at the house (not S-type).
I tested everything before leaving (still need to go back to finish the job but it’s in Sussex and I am London so can’t go back until January). All was fine in the cabin and got good readings on the supply cable for IR between all conductors, no continuity between conductors, good R1+R2. Energised everything, lights on, power on - all ok.
The next day I get a call saying the power has tripped out in the house at the incoming RCD. My first thought was a N-E fault on the sub-main but was confused as all had tested ok before I left. The main switch in the cabin was off, and after a few more days of nuisance tripping multiple times a day, I explained how to disconnect N and E from the DB (bloke is competent, just not a spark) and this seems to have cleared the fault for now.
It would be good to hear if anyone can elucidate further or has had a similar issue before? Does the fact the up front RCD is not time delayed make any difference?
Many thanks.