This is a theory that appears to fit with experience
Early RCDs did not have electronics and relied totally on the electrical energy created in the sensor's output winding to convert to mechanical energy adequate to operate the mechanical trip mechanism. The inertia of the system absorbed the energy created by transient impulses of un-balance between Live and Neutral currents.
Later RCDs used a simpler sensor with less windings ( Live and Neutral are not wound around the toroid core but pass straight through as a half turn ) thus less output which required electronics to measure the reduced output from the sensor. When the sensor output indicates an un-balance greater than 30 mA the electronics switch on an output to operate the trip mechanism.
The early sensors had two or three turns of the Live and Neutral leads around the toroid which was a much higher impedance to high frequency transients so the sensor output from transients and spikes would be far lower than they are in a modern half turn, low impedance sensor.
It is also possible that the electronics in a modern RCD will be saturated by a transient pulse from the sensor. This could be from a 1 amp unbalance that last less than a couple of micro-seconds. Such an unbalance could be created by loads being switched in circuits with considerable stray capacity between Neutral and Earth.
Early RCDs did not have electronics and relied totally on the electrical energy created in the sensor's output winding to convert to mechanical energy adequate to operate the mechanical trip mechanism. The inertia of the system absorbed the energy created by transient impulses of un-balance between Live and Neutral currents.
Later RCDs used a simpler sensor with less windings ( Live and Neutral are not wound around the toroid core but pass straight through as a half turn ) thus less output which required electronics to measure the reduced output from the sensor. When the sensor output indicates an un-balance greater than 30 mA the electronics switch on an output to operate the trip mechanism.
The early sensors had two or three turns of the Live and Neutral leads around the toroid which was a much higher impedance to high frequency transients so the sensor output from transients and spikes would be far lower than they are in a modern half turn, low impedance sensor.
It is also possible that the electronics in a modern RCD will be saturated by a transient pulse from the sensor. This could be from a 1 amp unbalance that last less than a couple of micro-seconds. Such an unbalance could be created by loads being switched in circuits with considerable stray capacity between Neutral and Earth.
