The bit of that I've highlighted is obviously true, so is going to leave some uncertainties (about what will happen with future loads). However ....You cannot say that testing the RCD with appliances in circuit is the way to go because there is no way you can account for what may be attached to the circuit at any one time.
Were you really taught that if, when tested on an installation 'as it was at the time', the RCD failed to trip (or failed to trip satisfactorily), maybe even to the extent that it didn't trip when one pressed its test button, you could/should "pass" the installation if the RCD tested satisfactorily "in isolation'?On my C&G courses, we were all taught only to test RCDs in isolation.
In any event, this whole discussion may be a bit hypothetical since, apart from all the recent discussions about 'types' of RCD, I thought that the main problem with testing RCDs in situ is that they may appear to be 'too trigger happy' (i.e. trip too easily, at test residual currents less than should cause them to trip), because of pre-existing residual/leakage currents due to connected loads - rather than a failure to trip (or to trip quickly enough) when they should. Is that not the case?
There's no short answer to that, since there are so many possible situations. What I would not do is 'pass' the installation if I had no reason to be confident that an L-E fault arising 5 minutes after I left would, with the installation 'as is', result in the RCD operating. At the very least I would conclude that 'further investigation was required'.What would you suggest the correct procedure would be if you found the RCD to fail to complete the test process?
As above, I can't really change my view. To take the 'worst case', would you really 'pass' and installation and 'walk away' if you knew that pressing the RCD's test button would not result in a trip, just because it had 'tested OK in isolation'?No, I don't believe it is.That's surely rubbish, and dangerous rubbish at that, isn't it?
Kind Regards, John