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Members on here are offering you sound advice especially in regard to your 'testing' methods. Any more insults to forum members this thread will be gone.
Discuss Need a portable RCBO to trip faster than general in the DIY Electrical Advice area at ElectriciansForums.net
I have identified the problem and a potential solution.
Thanks to all members
I mentioned this in post #19 of your other thread.Nobody here mentioned the term of ''selective tripping'', when you have 2 RCD in cascade. In my case, I should replace my general RCD by S type one. The selective residual current protective devices have the identification code S.
Those who are lacking the knowledge are scratching the head and leaving out
Can you enlighten us to the problem and solution ?.I have identified the problem and a potential solution.
Thanks to all members
Exactly. Thank you. Only the S type escaped from my attention. I didn't know before about existence of this type of devices. When I've found the selective tripping explanation, this caught instantly my attentionI mentioned this in post #19 of your other thread.
The problem is that two cascading RCD are tripping in the same time when leak occurs. Because the upstream RCD is not selective.Can you enlighten us to the problem and solution ?.
You're obviously finding out new things but if you didn't even know that S type devices existed, it just about sums up the knowledge involved in your ideas.Exactly. Thank you. Only the S type escaped from my attention. I didn't know before about existence of this type of devices. When I've found the selective tripping explanation, this caught instantly my attention
Reply to Need a portable RCBO to trip faster than general in the DIY Electrical Advice area at ElectriciansForums.net
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