Sorry for yet another 'my RCD has tripped' thread, but I have not found this through searching.
Since having by electrics upgraded a couple of months ago to include RCD protection on the sockets side, I have had a couple of rogue trips. It could have been the dishwasher (new) or tumble drier (older) either time before.
However, last night it went off after a quick on-off of the fluorescent strip light in the garage. The garage is integral, under a bedroom.
I have a TNCS arrangement, with separate consumer units for the RCD side (socket circuits except fridge freezer) and non-RCD side (everything else, including the garage light mentioned). The division is made via a Henley just after the meter.
Should it be possible for a circuit on the non-RCD side to trip the RCD?
Is this normal or does it suggest something is amiss? I cannot see how any rogue leakage to earth from a lighting circuit could affect the RCD side.
Since having by electrics upgraded a couple of months ago to include RCD protection on the sockets side, I have had a couple of rogue trips. It could have been the dishwasher (new) or tumble drier (older) either time before.
However, last night it went off after a quick on-off of the fluorescent strip light in the garage. The garage is integral, under a bedroom.
I have a TNCS arrangement, with separate consumer units for the RCD side (socket circuits except fridge freezer) and non-RCD side (everything else, including the garage light mentioned). The division is made via a Henley just after the meter.
Should it be possible for a circuit on the non-RCD side to trip the RCD?
Is this normal or does it suggest something is amiss? I cannot see how any rogue leakage to earth from a lighting circuit could affect the RCD side.