Discuss RCD Tripping - Advice Needed in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net
Shush don't tell em.No................ but after 2 attempts and no reasonable response from the OP one does wonder if it actually exists ....................... and then the OP gets arsy .....................
Edit : I see you are in Notts - you didn't do the install!
The OP made the comment that he checked that the operative carrying out the work was part p qualified which suggests he was using a Domestic installer and not an Electrician.This is getting a bit daft.
It's a basic mistake for a qualified electrician to design such a layout with RCBO's, MCB's and RCD's. It's devoid of competence. Makes you think!
Maybe I should have said 'for a domestic installer' rather than a 'qualified electrician'. It is pretty basic after all....then again, I suppose they are 'taught', these days, that, in most cases, all domestic circuits should be rcd protected, so, if some aren't, does it matter which?The OP made the comment that he checked that the operative carrying out the work was part p qualified which suggests he was using a Domestic installer and not an Electrician.
Bad installation design comes from a lack of proper training and on the job experience and as time passes rather than increasing the skills needed the profit before skills organisations are diluting the skill set needed to provide problem free installations.
As the world get's more technologically advanced the solution to installing it and even the basics appears to be a reduction in the level of training where it is at the bare bones of competence
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