Discuss Fire rating of fuseboard in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

With single/dual RCD yes, but not RCBO unless it has an up-front RCD (as sometimes done for TT systems). For RCBOs to interact in a non-obvious manner it would need to be a N-N sort of fault.
That was my thought. With the neutral being connected via a fly lead all of the current measured should be equal.

I wonder if it could be the switching effecting the electronics in the rcbo. With lighting I would expect a shared neutral and a botched cu change.
 
With single/dual RCD yes, but not RCBO unless it has an up-front RCD (as sometimes done for TT systems). For RCBOs to interact in a non-obvious manner it would need to be a N-N sort of fault.

The N-E fault tripping out other circuits happens because of the common RCD to several MCBs in older board. Basically as far as that RCD is concerned they are all the same circuit.

I would always go with DP (SP + N) RCBOs if I could as they make testing easier. But where it really matters is systems with RCDs higher in the supply chain, such as TT with incomer RCD, or a farm with 300mA RCD for fire safety reasons, or sub-main where you can't disconnect in time simply on Zs, etc. Without switching N there you don't have proper selectivity and any N-E fault will trip out the upstream protection.
I've had it twice where a recently wired building, TNC-S full sp rcbo board re energise the tripped rcbo and it would trip and also take out a random one with it, fault found to be N To Cpc fault in outside lighting in both cases.

The energising of the faulty circuit caused the trip in another.
 
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I've had it twice where a recently wired building, TNC-S full sp rcbo board re energise the tripped rcbo and it would trip and also take out a random one with it, fault found to be N To Cpc fault in outside lighting in both cases.

The energising of the faulty circuit caused the trip in another.
Very strange. Out of interest, why do you think a 1PSN RCBO protecting the faulty circuit would have prevented the tripping of random others, seeing as the faulty circuit would be complete on energising anyway?
 
I've had it twice where a recently wired building, TNC-S full sp rcbo board re energise the tripped rcbo and it would trip and also take out a random one with it, fault found to be N To Cpc fault in outside lighting in both cases.

The energising of the faulty circuit caused the trip in another.
Do you remember what brand of RCBO?

If you get enough of a kick on the supply, either fault current induced close to the RCBO, or voltage spike with cable capacitance, that can be enough trip to residual current detection. But those would not change with N-switching as such.

Still, I personally think all RCBO should be N-switching due to the easier testing for faults (e.g. open each in turn and IR the outgoing cables) as well as the slight protection it could give for reversed polatiry (not tripping on over-current, but on current imbalance, and probably "once only" if you are lucky on a major fault as usually the "N switching" side lacks the arc chute, etc, needed to live another day).
 
Do you remember what brand of RCBO?

If you get enough of a kick on the supply, either fault current induced close to the RCBO, or voltage spike with cable capacitance, that can be enough trip to residual current detection. But those would not change with N-switching as such.

Still, I personally think all RCBO should be N-switching due to the easier testing for faults (e.g. open each in turn and IR the outgoing cables) as well as the slight protection it could give for reversed polatiry (not tripping on over-current, but on current imbalance, and probably "once only" if you are lucky on a major fault as usually the "N switching" side lacks the arc chute, etc, needed to live another day).
Both CUs were Fusebox.
I only ever use miniature ones now.
 

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