cider_eater
Member
- Location
- north of Lands End
We have a Mig welder and keep tripping the main line
any one on here had same problem?
any one on here had same problem?
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Rcd type tripsWe have a Mig welder and keep tripping the main line
any one on here had same problem?
There are different classes of rcd you need the industrial type rating as the domestic type will trip continually type c or din the main box where all the switches are.
Is that a big job or not to change the trip?There are different classes of rcd you need the industrial type rating as the domestic type will trip continually type c or d
Not a big job I had to do mine in one shed as the welder tripped it but wasn’t in the other shedIs that a big job or not to change the trip?
Unlikely to be voltage drop if it is tripping an RCD - more likely to be a fault in the wiring somewhere such as damp or contamination somewhere - unless your RCD is actually a prehistoric VOELCB, in which case it should be replaced ASAP.Depends if it’s tripping the breaker or the main RCD. What rating is the breaker and size of mig? Does it do it on all power settings. If RCD is going it’s pointing towards a fault. We have an issue with the furthest shed from our supply with things like shearing machines occasionally tripping nain RCD at incoming supply. Have 99% put it down to voltage drop but funnily we were able to run three shearing machines off two extension leads across the yard last time but not from supply in said shed!!!
Unlikely to be voltage drop if it is tripping an RCD - more likely to be a fault in the wiring somewhere such as damp or contamination somewhere - unless your RCD is actually a prehistoric VOELCB, in which case it should be replaced ASAP.
For a modern RCD to trip (unless faulty) there has to be an imbalance in the currents in line & neutral or the three phases and neutral if it is 3 phase. The only way for this to happen is if current is finding a path via earth somewhere downstream of the RCD. A voltage drop doesn't cause current to "disappear" to earth, so there must be something else coming into play. The most common issue I have found where motors trip RCDs on startup is failing start or run caps on single phase and dying inverters/vfds on three phase systems.No this RCD is only about 5 yrs old max when a new supply was put into workshop. The electrician doing the upgrade work fitted a standalone RCD isolator on the supply as the consumer unit only had an isolator. A few sparkys have looked into the problem when doing other things and haven’t found anything. We’ve been through it many times aswell. We even tried isolating most other things to experiment, for some reason it only goes with motor startup! Inverter welder, hand held grinders etc are ok, even tried some electric heaters, halogen lamps and kettle etc to load up the circuit but would not mimic the fault. We found a dirty connection at an isolator switch and thought we cracked it but fault was there again!!
For a modern RCD to trip (unless faulty) there has to be an imbalance in the currents in line & neutral or the three phases and neutral if it is 3 phase. The only way for this to happen is if current is finding a path via earth somewhere downstream of the RCD. A voltage drop doesn't cause current to "disappear" to earth, so there must be something else coming into play. The most common issue I have found where motors trip RCDs on startup is failing start or run caps on single phase and dying inverters/vfds on three phase systems.
don't leave us hangingall done
cheers