- Sep 24, 2013
- 1,519
- 2,493
- 3,688
- If you're a qualified, trainee, or retired electrician - Which country is it that your work will be / is / was aimed at?
- United Kingdom
- What type of forum member are you?
- Practising Electrician (Qualified - Domestic or Commercial etc)
- Business Name
- Dovecote Electrical
I'm familiar with RCD spurs giving readings of 0.1 to 0.3MΩ when testing insulation resistance (L+N tied together to E), but what would give a reading of about 65Ω (when tested with "low resistance ohmmeter" i.e. continuity setting) N-E? On a lighting circuit - N isolated from other N's protected by the same RCD, and just for good measure the (double pole) RCD turned off (so if there's a borrowed N with another circuit, N on the circuit is still isolated from E at the PME block). RCD tests out fine, no reports of tripping.
I'll admit I didn't clamp L+N to see if there was actually any leakage... my working assumption is that this is an AC/DC thing - in the same way that if you measure the resistance across L and N when there's a transformer in the circuit (e.g. a shaver socket) it gives a very low reading, but it draws nothing at 50Hz.
I couldn't see any RCD spurs, but that doesn't mean there isn't one buried away somewhere... any I've never had a strange reading this low before.
What could it be?!?
Cheers
I'll admit I didn't clamp L+N to see if there was actually any leakage... my working assumption is that this is an AC/DC thing - in the same way that if you measure the resistance across L and N when there's a transformer in the circuit (e.g. a shaver socket) it gives a very low reading, but it draws nothing at 50Hz.
I couldn't see any RCD spurs, but that doesn't mean there isn't one buried away somewhere... any I've never had a strange reading this low before.
What could it be?!?
Cheers
