Yes, R = V/I = 230/0.03 = 7666.6 ohmsfor 30mA, 7666.6 ohms. but in reality, it will differ
An RCD should not trip if you are doing an insulation reading as there is no power on the circuit hopefully:|Evening all.Just a quick one. May be a silly question but, how low can an insulation reading be before an rcd will trip?
Cheers
Yeah i know minimum IR for circuits. Ill expand more when i get time tonight.Chris is this a purely technical question or is it related to an actual installation. are you aware of minimum Insulation Resistance values in the regs ?
That imbalance is caused by some current (ie, >30ma) leaking down to earth instead of it returning through it's correct return path (L-N). Insulation failure between L/N &E will create a low resistance between L/N & E, which if low enough, will allow 30ma to drain to earth and thus activate the RCD. Typically a switchwire trapped against a metal box by a pattress screw will cause such a low resistance to occur. Therefore my point is that earth leakage causing an RCD to trip can indeed occur as a result of low insulation resistance.....A 30mA RCD will trip only if there is a imbalance of more than 30mA between phase and neutral nothing to do with the insulation resistance of the circuit.
Heard that too many times before now!says it was alright before we turned up
Chris, at this stage I would have contacted the owner and informed him that the property needs a full rewire immediately. If he refused I would have walked away.Well when builder starts job i get a call "..can you just come and have a look?"
I arrived to find all insulation removed and a mass of wires. Like a spiders web. Wires going everywhere. Counted 24 JBs, Rubber cable, old colours, new colours, Steel wire, JB`s with no covers, Choc blocs everywhere untaped. Decide to crack open cu. MY GOD. Rats nest of above wires. Best was 2.5mm into incoming side of main switch to feed a COOKER because not enough mcb`s.
Turns out the homeowner used to be an electrician down the pit. :_|
Cool, but what would this be in Mega Ohms? 0.07ohms?Yes, R = V/I = 230/0.03 = 7666.6 hms
Cool, but what would this be in Mega Ohms? 0.07ohms?
Because 1 MegOhm is 1,000,000 ohms, as Andy said 7666.6ohms would be 0.007666 MegOhms. But if your meter only shows two decimal places on the MegOhms scale 7666.6 ohms would actually show as 0.00Megohms, or Zero Meg. Some 'electricians' get confused thinking that a zero reading when doing an insulation resistance test is a short circuit, but as it is on the MegOhms scale Zero meg results could still be over 9000ohms, which is no where near a short circuit..0.007
Thread resurrected from 2009
It is indeed a long resurrection period. What is more surprising is that it is not just an spammer advertising their overseas electrical supply company, but a genuine question relating to the original topic. Which may make it an even more impressive record?Is this a resurrection record?
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