huntos33
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Just wondering how sensitive the old crabtree voltage trips are compaired to a RCD ?
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Discuss Voltage Trips in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net
As far as i can remember you needed to test those old VOELCB's with a dedicated tester, to get any meaningful result, as to there operating efficiency!! Haven't see one of those test kit's for years now, not even on Ebay!! ...lol!! To be honest, they have passed there sell by date, current balance breakers are by far the better arrangement. If variants of the voltage operated type are still being sold, it would i think be for specialised installations, you certainly wouldn't replace an existing unit with a new one!! lol!!
yep...been out filey today....BS3036-6 way...TT=87.6 ohms.... crabtree VO ELCB....were gonna do away with the voelcb on second fix=test and put a stand alone RCD for the 3036 as its good for continued service .....The old VO trips such as the chilton or crabtree worked on a voltage of 50V to earth. RCD's otoh work on imbalance in the current flowing in the live and neutral conductors. RCD's are much more sensitive, but can be problematic because of this. as far as I know all VO ELCB's are obsolete, but in my area (east Yorkshire) they are almost universal in village installations, and work very well. when these were installed we used to put a polythene insert in the incoming water supply to prevent parralell earth paths, and also make sure that all bonding went back to the CU earth terminal(and thus through the elcb operating coil). the most vunerable part of the installation is the connection to the earth spike, and the fact that in prolonged periods of dry weather the earth loop impedance may rise considerably. Although I have never seen a trip that, when tested, failed to operate in dry weather, cases of nuisance tripping caused by localised fault currents from other earth spikes do rise. There are probably hundreds of thousands of the Crabtree "Chilton" pattern still in use, and although they are now obsolete, the reports I hear that they are dangerous are mainly excuses which generate work and profit, and sometimes may leave a householder with less protection than they had before. I have had absolutely no problems with Crabtree trips of the early (black with red button) or later (grey with yellow button) types. There os however an older model made by Tenby (I think) that almost always has a burnt out trip coil (you can smell them from yards away!) they also emit a slight buzzing indicating that current is flowing to earth but because of shorted windings, it can't trip. These are dangerous and should be changed! checking online I find many types of ELCB are still available, so they must still have a place in some installations. see Earth leakage circuit breaker - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia for more info.
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