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Form this bed time reading.
The article shows the method to measure real background leakage which it states should be no more than 30% of the tripping current of the RCD. Although it shows using a resistor with modern clamp on ammeters able to measure in the mA range I would think today it is just a case of measuring the leakage current directly.
However for an empty house it will clearly pass, only as items get plugged in with the massive 4 mA per amp be mounting up. So one RCD every 7.5 amp does seem a little OTT however the regulations state
Having been out of the trade for some time, and only did house bashing when no other work was going I do not know the answer for domestic, is there a figure given for socket supply as to what to allow as the background leakage per amp of supply, where the sockets are mixed electronic and non electronic equipment?
I have been considering the info given, 10 micro amps per meter leakage for cables, and 4 mA per amp for electronic appliance, which if I am doing maths correct equals 129 mA for a 32A ring feeding electronic equipment to the full 32A. It was unlikely this would happen, but with induction hobs, and microwaves the electronic power being used is increasing.Some ( heavy ) bed time reading
https://globaljournals.org/GJRE_Volume13/5-RCD-Nuisance-Tripping.pdf
Although specifically written about nuisance tripping and not country specific it does include some information about various types of RCDs ( active electronic, passive electronic and purely electromechanical ) and how they react to faults in the system
The article shows the method to measure real background leakage which it states should be no more than 30% of the tripping current of the RCD. Although it shows using a resistor with modern clamp on ammeters able to measure in the mA range I would think today it is just a case of measuring the leakage current directly.
However for an empty house it will clearly pass, only as items get plugged in with the massive 4 mA per amp be mounting up. So one RCD every 7.5 amp does seem a little OTT however the regulations state
so not to allow for the background leakage by splitting the RCD protection as well as MCB protection into circuits would be required to comply. For a domestic this requires the designer to assume some background leakage, although the article states 4 mA per amp this is not given in regulations so could be contested, to my mind it does seem rather high.(iv) reduce the possibility of unwanted tripping of RCDs due to excessive protective conductor currents produced by equipment in normal operation.
Having been out of the trade for some time, and only did house bashing when no other work was going I do not know the answer for domestic, is there a figure given for socket supply as to what to allow as the background leakage per amp of supply, where the sockets are mixed electronic and non electronic equipment?