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Regulation stating a type AC RCD can not be upstream from a type A RCD

Hi

I found an EV charger today with built in type A RCD + RDC-DD connected to a type AC RCD in the consumer unit, the AC RCD is also protecting 3 other circuits including sockets. I know this is incorrect because the type AC RCD could be blinded by DC currents, but I am struggling to find a regulation to reference when providing information to the customer?

Thanks

Alan

Parents
  • Except that bridge rectifier has a smoothing capacitor on the output, so the DC has a rather indeterminate ripple, so may need a B type to be detected in all cases, the 100% unsmoothed (no capacitor) case is all that a type A is certain to trip on - though it may trip of course, and probably will so long as the DC is not too smooth, the problem is it is far from clear what that is.

    Or an A-type + RDC-DD? (what some manufacturers call an EV type I think).

       - Andy.

Reply
  • Except that bridge rectifier has a smoothing capacitor on the output, so the DC has a rather indeterminate ripple, so may need a B type to be detected in all cases, the 100% unsmoothed (no capacitor) case is all that a type A is certain to trip on - though it may trip of course, and probably will so long as the DC is not too smooth, the problem is it is far from clear what that is.

    Or an A-type + RDC-DD? (what some manufacturers call an EV type I think).

       - Andy.

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