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dmh

I've been investigating a problem today with an RCD that keeps tripping. I have discovered that on one of the ring circuits that is RCD protected there is a neutral connection to the non rcd side of things but for the life of me I cannot track down where it occurs. Any suggestions from anyone as to how to find this and is this likely to be the cause of the RCD tripping (customer is adamant that nothing has changed recently and the RCD problem has only just started happening)

Thanks
 
may not be that

is it random trips?

you may get a reading across if IR readings are low-what sort of reading?

whats the IR readings like on the outgoing side of rcd?
 
the IR on outgoing side of rcd- with rcd in off position

leakage may be accumulating by the sound of it
 
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Sorry to maybe seem a bit stupid but I am a bit new to this fault finding stuff. If i test this and find that i have poor readings what would this suggest the fault is?
 
the rcd is detecting an imbalance between the line and neutral currents ie an earth leakage fault. Low IR reading between lives and earth could be responsible for the rcd trip, ie 30mA of current "leaking" between a live and earth. Sometimes rcd trips can be due to cumulative effects of lots of small earth leakages from several sources - lots of electronic devices will quite naturally contribute a small earth leakage, particularly computers. As the shower is a common factor have you had a look in their to check their are no small leaks.
 
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I did start with the shower and insulation resistance between all conductors was perfect (>299M ohms on my Megger). I then moved on and happened to notice that when I had the ring feeding the kitchen diconnected (live, neutral and cpc all disconnected at CU) I was getting a continuity reading between the disconnected neutrals and the non rcd neutral bar which didnt seem right and hence my original comment about an inter connected neutral somewhere.
 
Yes that was megaohms and it was the final circuit, not the shower itself.

No sign of any dampness in shower and trips almost immediatly so dont think its water getting into shower unit.

Not sure how would I check the IR on the shower itself.

Also as just mentioned the shower isn't on the RCD that is tripping.

The kettle has been replaced and problem persisted so dont think its the kettle either.
 
Not sure how would I check the IR on the shower itself.

.

Put line and neutral in one croc and earth in the other, test at 250V

As mentioned above worth checking all neutrals to earths and have you double checked that all neutrals are going back to the correct neutral bar?
 
I have checked that all neutrals go back to the correct bar and I will check the IR on the shower tomorrow and see what i get. Sorry to keep harping back to this but if the shower is faulty why would it cause the RCD to trip when the RCD in question isn't protecting the shower.
 
does the bath/ shower cubicle leak in any way? I have heard of the shower tripping an rcd when really it was not the electrics of the shower but the effect of water from it affecting the power sockets below - worth a look.
 
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Neutral Inter Connections
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dmh,
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