Discuss Rcd tripping cause? in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

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Daughter’s new house.
Garage has very old wylex distribution box connected to a double socket and a lighting circuit with one neon.

put an RCD’ed extension cord in socket and the RCD trips instantly.
Measured leak current at main fuse area.
The neon light was switched off.
Leakages

house as is : 3.8 ma
House with garage distribution switched off 3.4 ma.
Using another circuit,extension cable 0ma

can use tools in socket without problem.

I think there is a fault in the distribution box in the garage.
seeking other opinions?
 
Some RCD will trip if the polarity is wrong (i.e. L and N swapped) or if there is no CPC (earth) connection. Both faults are very serious so it needs to be identified and fixed urgently!

You might be best to get a professional electrician in.

But if you feel you can (or want to) identify if it is the socket at fault or there is something odd with the RCD adaptor then you could try one of these:

Please be aware that even these better quality socket testers are still limited in what they can tell you about the status of the supply socket. If they tell you it is faulty then you can be very sure it is, however, if they give the all-clear you might still have some subtle faults present. The cheap ~£10 socket testers are not that good though as they will pass a socket with wet string for the CPC!
 
Some RCD will trip if the polarity is wrong (i.e. L and N swapped) or if there is no CPC (earth) connection. Both faults are very serious so it needs to be identified and fixed urgently!

You might be best to get a professional electrician in.

But if you feel you can (or want to) identify if it is the socket at fault or there is something odd with the RCD adaptor then you could try one of these:

Please be aware that even these better quality socket testers are still limited in what they can tell you about the status of the supply socket. If they tell you it is faulty then you can be very sure it is, however, if they give the all-clear you might still have some subtle faults present. The cheap ~£10 socket testers are not that good though as they will pass a socket with wet string for the CPC!
Thanks for your help. The dual socket did not have a grommet and the earth wire was covered black.

I used a Megger leakage meter for the measurements and a kewtech socket tester which gave 3 green lights!
 
Thanks for your help. The dual socket did not have a grommet and the earth wire was covered black.

I used a Megger leakage meter for the measurements and a kewtech socket tester which gave 3 green lights!
 
could be N and E reversed in the fuse board. without RCD things work. (running L-E).
 
I have now for luck replaced temporarily that socket and the same result - seems to a problem within the fuse box.The wiring was red , black and bare wire with black overcoat.
 
Last edited:
The wiring needs properly testing, it is likely the earth wire at the socket isn't connected to earth at the other end of the cable.

Black sleeving on the bare earth wire might suggest the wiring is quite old, or someone just stripped a neutral wire and used the insulation as sleeving.
 
Black sleeving was never correct so it smacks of a DIY or bodge job. Agree that bad earth is a likely cause, some socket testers will still give happy lights even when the earth is very high resistance. However unlikely to be reverse polarity as the testers usually get that right. Unless it's both reversed and missing the earth, in which case you can get all green again if the disconnected earth is nearer line than neutral.

Loop impedance test at socket next.
 
Black sleeving was never correct so it smacks of a DIY or bodge job. Agree that bad earth is a likely cause, some socket testers will still give happy lights even when the earth is very high resistance. However unlikely to be reverse polarity as the testers usually get that right. Unless it's both reversed and missing the earth, in which case you can get all green again if the disconnected earth is nearer line than neutral.

Loop impedance test at socket next.
Thanks - will perform a loop impedance test tomorrow !
 
T
Some RCD will trip if the polarity is wrong (i.e. L and N swapped) or if there is no CPC (earth) connection. Both faults are very serious so it needs to be identified and fixed urgently!

You might be best to get a professional electrician in.

But if you feel you can (or want to) identify if it is the socket at fault or there is something odd with the RCD adaptor then you could try one of these:

Please be aware that even these better quality socket testers are still limited in what they can tell you about the status of the supply socket. If they tell you it is faulty then you can be very sure it is, however, if they give the all-clear you might still have some subtle faults present. The cheap ~£10 socket testers are not that good though as they will pass a socket with wet string for the CPC!
Thanks
 
I like my 3-wire plug-in fault loop tester for sockets

Indicates polarity is correct and takes the reading
Is it similar to the one I linked to?

I usually use my MFT if I can as it does most things I might want, I also made up a couple of moulded IEC plugs to 4mm 'safety' plug cables (10A and 16A) so I could check UPS outlets and similar power strips in data centres, etc.
 
Is it similar to the one I linked to?

I usually use my MFT if I can as it does most things I might want, I also made up a couple of moulded IEC plugs to 4mm 'safety' plug cables (10A and 16A) so I could check UPS outlets and similar power strips in data centres, etc.
No, i have a Robin plug in fault loop loop tester

Shows polarity and measures fault loop impedance
 
T
Some RCD will trip if the polarity is wrong (i.e. L and N swapped) or if there is no CPC (earth) connection. Both faults are very serious so it needs to be identified and fixed urgently!

You might be best to get a professional electrician in.

But if you feel you can (or want to) identify if it is the socket at fault or there is something odd with the RCD adaptor then you could try one of these:

Please be aware that even these better quality socket testers are still limited in what they can tell you about the status of the supply socket. If they tell you it is faulty then you can be very sure it is, however, if they give the all-clear you might still have some subtle faults present. The cheap ~£10 socket testers are not that good though as they will pass a socket with wet string for the CPC!
Thanks to all
 
Apologies to all.

I decided to use my socket tester ….. as I couldn’t remember checking the garage (oops).
It showed 1green meaning L and N wrong way round.
I checked with my loop impedance and it failed to start reporting a phase error.
Looking in the socket- there is one red, one black and a bare wire covered in black screening.
In the fuse box, there is the same mixture of wires.
The wires
 
So now for the approach given the wires are the wrong way around.
The layout is
Main CU
Fused spur kitchen
Fuse box garage
Socket
We know wires are crossed but what is the easiest may of finding where it occurs.
(As I stated there’s lots of black wires ( also in t&e)
The only method is to label all and disconnect
Check continuity to identify ends of each wire.
Then rewire the lot

must be an easier way? Suggestions welcomed!
 
Probably start in the middle somewhere and find it with a voltstick then confirm

If that's what you're saying?

You've got reverse polarity at an outlet and you don't know where it originates
 

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