Indeed - but I said nothing about trips, only that leaving an N-E fault 'uncleared' (by a SP RCBO) could lead to "potential problems". For example, if the N-E fault were of very low impedance, then a substantial proportion of the return current from all the loads in the installation could try to go via the E, which could be a 'threat' to CPCs.It would not stop the leakage but it would stop tripping as a result as the neutral to earth leakage is not going through any RCD device.
Well, for a start, if you really wanted to try to stick to a "9 mA maximum", that would mean a limit of two outlets (e.g. one double socket) per RCBO - which would obviously be daft in most situations. In any event, whilst you say that "3.5 mA is the limite" that certainly doesn't mean that no loads (particularly older equipment) will have greater leakage than that - so you really would have to restrict yourself to one single socket per RCBO (and not use any double sockets) - which would be even more daft!Not quite, 3.5 mA is the limit for most things, so at least 3 sockets per circuit, ....
That is, of course, inevitable, given the way that test buttons on RCD sockets work (by introducing an N-CPC 'fault'). I suppose the idea is that the test button tests for an adequate earth connection, as well as RCD functioning. which is no bad thing.But the 10 mA MK socket we had a work increased the number of trips of the 100 mA and 300 mA trips, as people would press the test button, and it would trip all three every time.
Sceptical though I can be about the 'new fangled', I suppose there is potential scope for technology to address this whole issue. If residual current devices could be made which tripped in response to a sudden increase in residual current (by 30 mA, 10 mA or whatever), then all these issues/discussion about 'residual leakage' (hence some of the arguments in favour of RCBOs) would go away.But what you need is for back ground leakage to be below 5 mA, as a 30 mA should trip between 15 - 30 mA so if there is over 5 mA leaking then it could still trip the house one first.
As I've often said, whilst I have had freezers cease functioning because they have died (sometimes tripping a protective device in the process), I have personally never had one stop functioning for an appreciable period due to an unnoticed loss of power - at least partially because I would never power a freezer from a dedicated circuit' or even from a circuit whose failure would not be rapidly apparent to occupants.The other is knowing it has tripped, my freezer has a light on when powered up, but I tend not to notice lack of a warning light, my emergency touch lights with a power cut, I notice that straight away, so I investigate and turn power back on ....
Exactly. Well-intentioned though it may be, the practice (and regulatory encouragement) to split installations into ever-increasing numbers of circuits considerably increases the risk of loss of power to one circuit going unnoticed. That is why I would always encourage peopleto put things like freezers and alarms (e.g. smoke alarms) on 'widely used' circuits, and never on dedicated ones.As you split the home into smaller and smaller circuits, the chance of not realising when the power has tripped increases. I did at one point consider a dedicated circuit for freezers, but that would mean less likely to notice when it trips.
I would imagine that effective cooling of the freezer must have stopped long before it 'went bang'. My experience, and that of others, is that, provided the freezer is not opened, a freezer will usually keep things frozen for at least 24 hours, probably more.I was surprised how quickly a freezer defrosts. I was in the kitchen when our freezer went bang, it had clearly just stopped, and I had a spare in the garage, so turned on the spare and waited for it to cool down before starting the transfer of food, maybe ¾ hour, when I came to move food, found food at top of freezer had already started to defrost. I would assume it went bang as the motor tried to restart after the defrost cycle, and the heat had risen to top only from the compartment with the cooling bits in, and since no fan running it only affected food at top?
Kind Regards, John