Discuss RCD Trip on isolated circuit in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

A

Alan Shaw

Hi,
I am fairly new to this having only just completed and passing my Part P qualification so please bear with me. I decided to tidy up some wiring carried out in my house by a "professional" bathroom installer. The circuit in question is a 16amp radial with only one outlet supplying an immersion. The MCB was turned off but when I disconnected the immersion the RCD tripped. when line and earth wires came into contact with each other. I checked and found 5 volts between the 2 conductors and believing there may be an insulation fault ran a 1000v insulation test and all was in order. I disconnected line feed from consumer unit but still the RCD trips when conductors come in to contact. The reason I mentioned a 5 volt reading is on checking other circuits that have been isolated no voltage is evident.

Ive spent a long time investigating without success so any advice would be appreciated
 
you have gone neutral earth....
as the neutral will still be connected....as will the CPC....the RCD has seen it as an imballance.....and thus a fault..


this caused it to let go..

electrical disconnection/seperation means just that:

both/all live conductors....this includes the neutral as its a current carrying conductor...and thus is considered live...
 
Reading between the lines, do I take it that there is not fault as such. Thanks for your very prompt reply it is really appreciated.
 
Do you consider that turning off an MCB constitutes safe isolation for a circuit prior to work? Is it sufficient for conducting a 1000V insulation test? Your post raises many points about the sequence in which one tackles the job. But as Glenn says, there is little question about why the RCD tripped, as the neutral would still have been connected.
 
Worked some 40+ years ago in industry before changing careers. Decided to freshen up out of interest now I am retired and get up to date with 17th edition really as a hobby.
 
Worked some 40+ years ago in industry before changing careers. Decided to freshen up out of interest now I am retired and get up to date with 17th edition really as a hobby.
you cannot really just treat electrical installation/testing as a "hobby"...

you know what they say about a little knowledge....
 
Reading between the lines, do I take it that there is not fault as such. Thanks for your very prompt reply it is really appreciated.

correct. do a forum search on phantom voltage and use of analogue meters to prove/disprove.
 
So by your definition a hobbyist by definition less knowledgeable than the professional who carried out the work in my house. Wish I had taken a photograph of his work. By submitting my post I am gaining knowledge. I did at least put my cards on the table when I posted so I am not trying to be clever.
 
Do you consider that turning off an MCB constitutes safe isolation for a circuit prior to work? Is it sufficient for conducting a 1000V insulation test? Your post raises many points about the sequence in which one tackles the job. But as Glenn says, there is little question about why the RCD tripped, as the neutral would still have been connected.

Why 1000v?

I'm a bit rusty since I did my 2391 but I thought it was 500V test voltage fit anything up to 500 line voltage?

Let me know if I'm not up to date!
 
So by your definition a hobbyist by definition less knowledgeable than the professional who carried out the work in my house. Wish I had taken a photograph of his work. By submitting my post I am gaining knowledge. I did at least put my cards on the table when I posted so I am not trying to be clever.
i am not saying that...
theres some rite emptyheads about carrying out installation work...who are neither competant..nor intelligent enough to properly grasp what we are dealing with....

so dangerous...
 
Did both 500v and 1000v just to be confident.
PS did the insulation test with both conductors disconnected from consumer unit.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
correct. do a forum search on phantom voltage and use of analogue meters to prove/disprove.

You can also get digital meters with a special low input impedance voltage range, to distinguish between energised circuits and ghost voltages. E.g. the Fluke 117. See Dual impedance digital multimeters - What's the point?

This range probably would not have shown up the false 5V reading you saw, which, as typical ghost voltages go, is pretty low. It's not uncommon on long runs of conduit cables, embedded amongst lots of energised lines, to get a reading of 100V or more open-circuit on a Hi-Z DMM.
 
You can also get digital meters with a special low input impedance voltage range, to distinguish between energised circuits and ghost voltages. E.g. the Fluke 117. See Dual impedance digital multimeters - What's the point?

This range probably would not have shown up the false 5V reading you saw, which, as typical ghost voltages go, is pretty low. It's not uncommon on long runs of conduit cables, embedded amongst lots of energised lines, to get a reading of 100V or more open-circuit on a Hi-Z DMM.
you can also get it between neutral & earth on a TN-S Lucien....
when the referance (star) point is a long way off...

- - - Updated - - -

a couple of volts that is...
 

Reply to RCD Trip on isolated circuit in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

Similar Threads

My friend just moved into a new build flat and its for a disabled person with a hydraulic lift to go to the upper floor. There was/is a leak...
Replies
8
Views
450
Hi all, Been a while since I have been on here. I have been on an apprenticeship the last 3 years training in the BMS world. Taking that into...
Replies
7
Views
346
I have just checked a double outlet and it trips at 18ma. It was supposed to be faulty. Washing machine had a bad heater which got replaced but...
Replies
10
Views
587
An RCD keeps tripping. Please see attached photo of the board (2 photos attached). I’ll call the breakers: MCB (1) marked ‘Upstairs lighting’...
Replies
4
Views
1K
Called out to fault on RCD tripping maybe twice in a month for sometime. Did all the tests & found RCD was faulty, Refitted a new Rcd Type A which...
Replies
2
Views
826

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Electrician Courses Green Electrical Goods PCB Way Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Pushfit Wire Connectors Electric Underfloor Heating Electrician Courses
These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then CLICK HERE and post a thread with who you are, and we'll send you some stats etc

YOUR Unread Posts

Electrical Forum

Welcome to the Electrical Forum at ElectriciansForums.net. The friendliest electrical forum online. General electrical questions and answers can be found in the electrical forum.
This website was designed, optimised and is hosted by Untold Media. Operating under the name Untold Media since 2001.
Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock