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Residual
Current Devices
Residual current devices (RCDs)
also known as Safety Switches,
are probably the best means we have for preventing fatality or
injury from electric shock. They are installed in the switch boards of
new buildings and are being installed in many older premises as
well.
A word of Caution:
Good as they
are, RCDs should not be relied on as the total answer to electrical
safety. We do find faulty ones. They simply provide one level of safety to
compliment the other strategies of an effective safety policy.
How RCDs Work
In simple
terms, the RCD monitors the outgoing current of a circuit and compares
it to the incoming current. If all is normally, these two currents will
be the same. However, if some of the outgoing current is leaking away to
earth, (flowing through a person for example) the outgoing current will be greater than the incoming. The RCD detects this imbalance and
"trips off", disconnecting the supply.
Because they
detect the balance between the two currents, they can be made very sensitive
and fast acting enough to switch off the current
before it has had time to cause harm.
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