According to the rules for the design of electrical installations and fire safety standards, the electrical network at the entrance to the apartment or cottage must have a fire protection RCD. This is a normal differential switch, only having a higher leakage current than classic protection devices against electric shock.
When choosing a similar device designed to prevent fire, a number of conditions must be observed. Its installation also involves the fulfillment of specific electrical installation requirements.
Let's understand the features of this device, its scope and key features that you need to pay attention to when choosing this equipment.
General functions of the differential switch
In household and industrial electrical networks, several types of protective devices are used to prevent fires and electric shock to people. All of them are designed to operate in the event of breakdowns in electrical installations or breakdown of wiring insulation.
The principle of operation, the elements inside and the controlled characteristics they have are different. However, the task is the same everywhere - in case of problems, quickly break the power circuit.
You can not confuse the RCD and the difavtomat, the device and functionality they differ. The first device only controls the occurrence of leakage current, and the second is also designed to operate during short circuits and overloads in the network
RCD (differential switch) is an electrical device that breaks the power line when a high leakage current occurs. The latter occurs during the breakdown of the insulating layer in various thermal electric heaters and wires.
If at this moment a person touches the case of the broken equipment, then the electric current will go through it to the ground. And this is fraught with serious injuries. To prevent this, a residual current circuit breaker (residual current circuit breaker) is put in the circuit.
RCD consists of conventional and fire-fighting of:
- housing;
- transformer with three windings;
- EMF relay.
In a normal operating state, an electric current passing through transformer windings forms magnetic fluxes with different poles. And when they are added, the resulting zero is obtained. The relay in this state is closed and transmits current.
But when a leak occurs, the balance on the windings is violated. The automatic switch under consideration reacts to this by opening the circuit. As a result, the voltage in the network disappears - a broken electrical device is de-energized, and nothing threatens a person anymore. The operation of the RCD takes place literally in a few milliseconds.
- short circuits;
- network congestion and / or the electrical installation itself;
- excess leakage associated with degradation of insulation.
In the first two cases, the protective shutdown is carried out by a difavtomat (thermal electromagnetic release) or by blowing a fuse. For the third situation, the RCD under consideration for the differential current exists precisely. There are also special insulation monitoring devices, but they are expensive and are rarely installed in apartment or house panels.
How can an RCD prevent fire?
With electrical injuries, sparks that can cause a fire do not form. But a fire can still occur if a leakage current occurs. The thing is wiring and electric current passing through the cables. Initially, the cores are designed for strictly defined voltage values. If these parameters are beyond the design standards, then not long before the appearance of open fire.
If a powerful leakage of electric current begins through the torn insulation, then the metal of the wires, not designed for such, starts to heat up too much - this leads to a melting of the insulating braid and heating of surrounding objects
The task of the fire protection RCD is to control this situation and prevent overheating of the wiring. If the insulation is damaged and a leakage current is generated, the protective device simply disconnects the problem line from the network. If there is a differential switch in the circuit, the matter is that the heating of the metal of the cores is too strong and the fire does not even reach.
A leakage current within 300–500 mA and a voltage of 220 V is the heat generated equal to the heat generated from a lit household lighter. Such heat generation inevitably leads to ignition of the wiring and everything nearby.
The main function of the class of RCDs under consideration is not to protect a person, but to increase fire safety. To prevent electric shock, after fire protection devices, ordinary devices of a lower leakage current rating are put in the circuit.
Functionally fire RCD protects:
- Input cable in front of you.
- Posting a line of consumers after yourself.
- Connected electrical equipment when a standard differential switch located below is not tripped in the event of a malfunction.
Fire protection RCD is part of the cascade protection of the 220 V power supply network. It is not used in smoke control and fire monitoring systems. On the contrary, such protective devices should not be present in them. In certain situations, they can disable such a control system, which is completely unacceptable.
Equipment Selection Criteria
Existing RCDs are divided into single-phase and three-phase. In everyday life, only the first devices are used. A line in one phase almost always goes to an apartment and a private house from an electric panel. The differential switch for this is used with two terminals (input plus output), while the three-phase analogs of the terminals for wires have four.
All RCDs are divided according to the type of leakage current into three groups: "A", "B" and "AC". For fire-fighting needs, you should take the option “AC” (only for alternating electric current), “A” and “B” are more expensive, as they are designed additionally for working with pulsating and rectified currents
Residual current devices are:
- electronic;
- electromechanical.
The former are more expensive, but less reliable. In almost all cases, fire protection RCDs are best taken precisely in the electromechanical class. Such a switch does not need external power. When the supply line breaks, the electronic analogue ceases to work and monitor insulation damage. Plus, during a power surge, it increases the response time.
The two main criteria for choosing a fire protection RCD are the selectivity of the device (the ability to set a trip delay in it) and the high leakage current parameter (100–300 mA). If one of these conditions is not met, then the system of protective devices in the electrical panel will not work as expected.
The RCD of the selective type is indicated in the marking on the case by the letter "S", it must be installed as a fire element of the cascade (it trips with the time delay set off)
According to the norms, the fire protection RCD must differ at least three times in a larger direction from the lower conventional one in:
- leakage current;
- response time.
If the difference in these parameters is less than three times, then when the downstream differential circuit breaker trips, it will react to the circuit shutdown and the fire fighting device. As a result, it will be more difficult to find out the reason for the shutdown, and without power all consumers in parallel lines that have no problems will remain without power.
Ideally, a cascade circuit from various RCDs should work so that when problems arise, only the device that is closest to the location of the insulation breakdown will respond. In this situation, only the protected circuit is disconnected. The rest continue to be energized.
With the requirement of a high leakage current parameter, the situation is as follows. In conventional RCDs, it is selected within 10–40 milliamps. The working electric current (maximum consumption of connected electrical appliances in the line) in this case reaches 16–40 A. This is quite enough for lighting and sockets with household appliances.
However, any electrical network has natural leaks. In the project of an intra-apartment or intra-house power system, they are specially calculated in order to choose the right RCD. They must not exceed 1/3 of the leakage current of the selected differential switch for a particular line. Otherwise, the protective device will operate falsely on a regular basis.
According to the rules, a fire protection RCD is placed immediately after the electric meter at the entrance to the house, it summarizes the natural leakage by electric current from all the household appliances connected to the house
If a protective device is selected, as for the usual case, at 10–40 mA, then the mains will be permanently disconnected. In fact, continuously, the RCD will begin to detect leaks, responding to power off in all power lines of the house.
Circuit breaker installation diagrams
RCDs are not designed to monitor overloads in the mains, so it must be installed together with a standard "automatic" - circuit breaker. So the defense will come out complete in all areas of concern.
The standard connection diagram of protective devices in the electrical panel is as follows:
- The first at the entrance is the machine.
- Then an electricity meter is set.
- Then the fire protection RCD (100–300 mA) is connected.
- After that, the circuit is divided into several separate consumption lines with an RCD from electric shock (10–40 mA).
In some schemes, the first circuit breaker is changed to a batch switch, and less powerful machines are then placed on consumer lines. This option also does not contradict the rules.
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General scheme for connecting a single-phase RCD
Differences between fire and conventional RCD
Differential current switch and circuit breaker
Installation of a protective device in different electrical networks
When connecting the wires, it is important to ensure that the outputs from the RCD are not combined at a common zero and generally do not intersect with other zero conductors or the shield body. After this protective device, the line should immediately go to another RCD or machine, and then immediately to consumers.
After installation is completed, it is necessary to verify the correct assembly of the entire circuit and the operability of the protective device.
First, some equipment is connected to the outlet for the appearance of a load in the network and voltage is applied. If everything is correct and isolation is intact everywhere, then no RCD trips should occur
Then the differential switch itself is checked. To do this, on most RCDs there is a button “T” (“TEST”). When it is pressed, the rated leakage current is simulated, as a result of which the protection should work normally. Moreover, testing should work regardless of whether there is a load or not.
If, when you click on "TEST", the RCD does not disconnect the line, then it is faulty. It is possible that the leak simulation circuit has broken. In this case, the protection device will continue to perform its functions, as laid down in it. However, even such a switch is best replaced immediately. Such a check is recommended to be done once a month.
It is necessary to clearly separate the functions with the parameters of the fire and conventional RCD. These devices look and look exactly the same inside. However, the tasks assigned to them are different. To understand all the nuances of these differences, we recommend that you additionally look at the videos below.
Purpose of the fire protection device:
What is a residual current device with a description of the ratings and types:
Why connect household appliances via RCD:
You can always install a fire safety RCD yourself, since the instructions are simple and understandable even to an amateur. It has only two inputs, you only need to connect a couple of wires. It is only important to correctly select the ratings of this device so that it works when necessary. But if there are no skills for such a connection, it is better to invite an electrician.
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