Try here ... Click on the link in the article for the actual PDF report
I’m sure we have discussed this before, and the Italian figures (7.1% failure when not regularly tested, 2.8% if regularly tested) are certainly frequently quoted. A few quick observations about the ERA report:
1...Despite what the ESC say in their summary of the ERA report, ‘ingress of contaminants and moisture’ was only mentioned in relation to 3/10 failed RCDs examined by ERA (2 cases and 1 case respectively – see Table 2)
2...In contrast, ‘contact welding’ or ‘severe contact disruption’ was reported in 5 out of the 10 failed RCDs which were examined. That makes one wonder whether they are engineered adequately to be able to break circuits on-load without being damaged and hence whether it is safe to leave an RCD in service if it has operated ‘in anger’ in the presence of a high load.
3...The overall failure rate figures are appreciably affected by the fact that one Housing Authority (‘B’, which contributed 80/607 RCDs tested) had a very much higher failure rate than the others. If that HA is excluded, the overall failure rate falls from 3.8% to 2.1%.
4...Attempting to determine whether regular testing of RCDs affects reliability by asking retrospectively (at the time of testing) when the RCD was last user-tested is a very biased approach which may make the effect of regular testing appear considerably greater than it is. If most users who regularly test their RCDs have them replaced if they fail the test, this would considerably reduce the probability of a faulty RCD being found at any particular point in time, even if the user-testing had no effect on reliability. Indeed, if monthly user-testing were undertaken (per Italian figures) with replacement of units which failed the test, one would expect to find very few failed RCDs at all on 'random' testing at any point in time. What is needed is a prospective study – or, at least, a study which makes use of full retrospective records about the history of the RCDs – something which is acknowledged by the ERA.
If the ‘failure’ rate is roughly of the order of 2% - 4%, this clearly would represent an awful lot of faulty RCDs in service in the UK at any point in time, which is clearly a cause for concern. However, as I often say, one has to wonder what is the corresponding figures for OPDs (MCBs and RCBOs). OPDs probably operate in service far less commonly than RCDs, cannot be user-tested and, in most practical senses, cannot be tested at all – and one can but presume that ‘sticking due to lengthy periods of non-operation’ is a fairly likely failure mode. One therefore might speculate thatthe 'failure' rate of MCBs could easily be higher than for RCDs. Particularly in view of (2) above, one certainly has to wonder how safe it is to leave an MCB (which effectively cannot be tested) in service after it has operated ‘in anger’.
Kind Regards, John