Surely you would agree a commando socket is safer.
No.
Surely you would agree a commando socket is safer.
The RCDs fitted on hot tubs are often 10mA trip, i.e. 3 times as sensitive as ones in your CU. There is a reason for this - your safety. It should not have been removed.
You appear to be making the common mistake oof assuming (incorrectly) that an RCD can limit the current that flows through a human body receiving an electric shock.I cannot see any regulation which requires an RCD as sensitive as 10mA for a hot tub, but if the one removed was more sensitive than the 30mA at the mains - then its removal was wrong. 30mA provides very little if any protection for a sopping wet body, in a sopping wet environment - 12mA is enough to kill.
All an RCD can do is reduce the duration (not magnitude) of the current flowing through a person and (although I may be wrong), I am not aware of 10mA ones being able to operate any more quickly (with the same 'residual current') than a 30mA one.
As I said (and you quoted), in the the scenario you described, I very much doubt it, since I doubt that, in the face of a current through the victim which was considerably greater than 30mA, a 30mA one would trip appreciably less rapidly than a 10mA one - but, as I said, I'm not certain about the characteristics of these devices.So, would a 10mA one offer better protection in the circumstances, than a 30mA RCD?
Yes, that would certainly be preferable. It would require either a new busbar or a wire link, but the house CU could presumably be adapted by moving the garage circuit from the B16 MCB on the RCD side to a 16A RCBO on the non-RCD side.I'd much rather that was on it's own RCBO or all the circuits in the garage were on a separate RCD.
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