Hi all,
I am not preparing to do any work myself - this is beyond me - but I'd appreciate any thoughts about it so I can have a useful discussion with an Electrician when one eventually comes to visit.
My consumer board has a number of separate circuits and 2 x 80A 30mA RCDs... one of the RCDs is flipping now and again - taking out half of the house (ground floor lights, first floor sockets, boiler, oven and a circuit with no label I assume is the outside socket that we had put in about four years ago).
None of those circuits to the left of it are flipping (none at all in the consumer board are). I thought if there was a problem with an appliance or circuit then the circuit would trip / flip, identifying the problem... but it's just the RCD on its own. All other circuits remain up.
Do RCDs age with time and they just sometimes need replacing, or does an RCD that flips indicate some kind of real problem somewhere, as yet unidentified? Is there any benefit to turning off specific circuits for, say, a day at a time and seeing whether that influences the RCD itself tripping / flipping - or - because none of them are doing anything anyway would it be a pointless exercise?
I have pressed the yellow button to test the RCD and it worked just as it should - half the house went down and I flipped it back myself.
No recent work has been conducted.
I am not preparing to do any work myself - this is beyond me - but I'd appreciate any thoughts about it so I can have a useful discussion with an Electrician when one eventually comes to visit.
My consumer board has a number of separate circuits and 2 x 80A 30mA RCDs... one of the RCDs is flipping now and again - taking out half of the house (ground floor lights, first floor sockets, boiler, oven and a circuit with no label I assume is the outside socket that we had put in about four years ago).
None of those circuits to the left of it are flipping (none at all in the consumer board are). I thought if there was a problem with an appliance or circuit then the circuit would trip / flip, identifying the problem... but it's just the RCD on its own. All other circuits remain up.
Do RCDs age with time and they just sometimes need replacing, or does an RCD that flips indicate some kind of real problem somewhere, as yet unidentified? Is there any benefit to turning off specific circuits for, say, a day at a time and seeing whether that influences the RCD itself tripping / flipping - or - because none of them are doing anything anyway would it be a pointless exercise?
I have pressed the yellow button to test the RCD and it worked just as it should - half the house went down and I flipped it back myself.
No recent work has been conducted.