David E said:Can anyone help with the difference in MCB types (BC&D) I remember one trips less easially eg bulb blowing on a lighting circuit, but can't remember which one.
David
kai said:A method to remember:-
B is Basic type MCB for household use.
C is "Commercial" for commercial use Or Similar etc.
D is Dangerous type - leave well alone in domestic homes.
FWL_Engineer said:Andrew, to blindly say that Type C should be used for lighting circuits is dangerous.
Type C breakers have no place in a domestic environment, if a light blowing causes the MCB to operate, then this is usually indicative of some other problem, usually cheap and nasty lamps or faulty transformers on LV lighting.
Unless you have a home filled with fluorescent lights, you should have no requirement to take into account the high induced loads these can produce, which is why banks of lights in Offices and similar environments are protected by Type C breakers.
What you have proposed is similar to increasing the fuse size in the old days...stupid and dangerous.
No-one should install a type C breaker in a domestic premises as there should be no need for them. Correctly installed fittings, wiring and intelligent choice of lamps will normally eradicate all nuisance tripping caused by lamp failure.
andrew2022 said:providing the earth loop is low enough, C6 can be used for lighting circuits
FWL_Engineer said:andrew2022 said:providing the earth loop is low enough, C6 can be used for lighting circuits
Andrew, perhaps you should have made that comment in your original post, but I still disagree.
A properly designed circuit should not suffer from nuisance tripping, however should the client choose to use cheap and nasty lamps, that should not be an excuse to fit C type breakers, but rather an opportunity to educate the client and inform them of the merits of buying quality lamps which are more cost effective in the long term and avoid the nuisance trip issue.

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