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A Novel Theory
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<blockquote data-quote="Technician" data-source="post: 272417" data-attributes="member: 15198"><p>I had this in my house; a lamp would fail and cause the</p><p></p><p>C/B to operate. Not an indication of good electrics as</p><p></p><p>Andy says and this would not cause the operation of a</p><p></p><p>BS3036 because this takes longer to operate in the event</p><p></p><p>of a high fault current, longer than a circuit breaker. (Pro Dave)</p><p></p><p>For some reason, there is a surge of current just prior to</p><p></p><p>failure of the element.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Technician, post: 272417, member: 15198"] I had this in my house; a lamp would fail and cause the C/B to operate. Not an indication of good electrics as Andy says and this would not cause the operation of a BS3036 because this takes longer to operate in the event of a high fault current, longer than a circuit breaker. (Pro Dave) For some reason, there is a surge of current just prior to failure of the element. [/QUOTE]
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