Jump to content
Security Installer Community

Recommended Posts

Posted

Hi, wonder if you could confirm my thoughts please. 

My daughter is abroad on holiday at the moment and I received a call from her saying her neighbour had just called to let her know that her alarm was going off, By the time I got to her house and the sounder had stopped but the strobe was still flashing outside.  I went in and entered the code, the keypad was showing tamper but no zones were lit, on further inspection the downstairs RCD had tripped and the green light on the control panel was flashing, so running just on the battery.  I turned on the RCD and cleared the tamper but left the alarm unset for the moment, not wanting to upset the neighbours again. 

The power could have been off for several days and I guess it's probably just the battery in the panel running down and needs replacing. 

Thanks, Pete 

Posted

Most likely. System will tamper when the voltage becomes very low but would have to check log as well.

As pointed out the log will be vague on something so basic.

Check the charging rate and replace battery would be sensible.

  • Thanks 1
Posted

Depending on if the system is regularly serviced, the battery should last around 12 hours without mains and should recharge within 24 hours. But my concern would not be the alarm, it would be the RCD tripping especially when no-one is home to switch stuff on and off, what else is on the circuit ? 

 

Did you have a look around the house for small fires?

Posted
8 hours ago, PeterJames said:

Depending on if the system is regularly serviced, the battery should last around 12 hours without mains and should recharge within 24 hours. But my concern would not be the alarm, it would be the RCD tripping especially when no-one is home to switch stuff on and off, what else is on the circuit ? 

 

Did you have a look around the house for small fires?

Thanks for your reply.

For a few days running, before the alarm went off we had been experiencing violent thunderstorms in the area, whether that can affect a RCD  I do not know.  She had an electrician in today to sign off the electrics in the house and he found no problems and gave her a certificate. We have fitted a new panel battery as well as we think the old battery was approximately 9 years old.

Posted
On 09/09/2022 at 21:11, hunter27 said:

Thanks for your reply.

For a few days running, before the alarm went off we had been experiencing violent thunderstorms in the area, whether that can affect a RCD  I do not know.  She had an electrician in today to sign off the electrics in the house and he found no problems and gave her a certificate. We have fitted a new panel battery as well as we think the old battery was approximately 9 years old.

The battery did well for 9 years, the life expectancy is 4 years, if the battery was defective it would damage the charging circuit, the only way you will find out if thats happened would be your next power cut.

I would be very surprised if a storm caused the RCD to trip RCD stands for residual current device and as the name suggest its monitoring the residual current on a circuit, even if the earth was locally hit by lighting its unlikely to change the residual current on just one circuit. 

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.