Hi there

Any help most appreciated

According to the operational manual for the fronius IG TL 3.6 it has an RCMU to protect against residual DC currents. so a B type RCD is not required, It then goes on to say if an external RCD is required due to local regulations then a type B 100mA RCD should be fitted.. Does this mean if it is a TT installation it must have a seperate type B RCD????
 
In a nutshell, yes. Feel free to PM me if you require any assistance. Might be worth your while doing a search on here for Type-B RCDs and TL inverters too.

Andy
 
Any suggestions where to get one? I've spoken to a couple of my local wholesalers and lets just say they aren't equipped to deal with my request...
 
If Fronius state a type B is not required 'cos the inverter has an inbuilt RCMU to deal with DC residuals, why would it need a type B for a TT installation? Surely it either needs a type B for all eventualities or it doesn't.
 
I've read it as being because TT installations require all circuits to be RCBO/RCD protected, so the connection to the grid is via a RCD making this an external RCD. I may be wrong though..
 
It will require an RCD for a TT installation to meet disconnection times. My question is why a type B? If the inverter is incapable of feeding DC faults onto the AC side due to its construction, as it would appear to be, then a standard RCD should suffice (see last line of 712.411.3.2.1.2). If the inverter can feed DC onto the AC side in the event of a fault, then a type B RCD should be fitted at all times, not just on a TT installation. Seems contrary to what Fronius state.
 
Many thanks JC seems straight forward when you put it like that, So in that case I can use a standard Type AC RCD I don't even need to use a type A RCD?
 
I dunno! I'd say yes, a standard type AC would do, but it seems Fronius say not. In which case, go with the manufacturer's recommendation on the basis that they know a lot more than I do. I am just curious as to why they recommend a type B if they also state that their inverter can't feed DC onto the AC side.
 
Where is the spiel from fronius about this? I couldn't find it online? I was looking for this myself, as I nearly ended up with a fronius TL on a job..
 

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Fronius Transformerless Inverter
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Solar PV Forum | Solar Panels Forum
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