RCD Tripping Mascot

Emergency Response in Mascot

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The Inner South has Sydney's highest concentration of strata-managed residential property. Common-property switchboards, lift power supplies, fire indicator panels, and EV-charger common-property infrastructure dominate our local work.

Across the Inner South's mix of older homes and industrial-commercial pockets, an RCD tripping often traces to tired wiring or a faulty appliance leaking to earth, sometimes a worn motor or pump in a workshop or shopfront. Older insulation breaking down is the usual culprit we chase down.

⚠ Stop — Call Immediately if You Notice Any of These:
  • A tingle, prickle, or buzz when you touch a tap, appliance, or shower fitting
  • A burning, fishy, or "electrical" smell anywhere on the affected circuit
  • Hot or discoloured power points on the affected circuit
  • An RCD that holds for a few seconds then trips — strongly suggests a real, active leakage
  • An RCD that won't trip when its TEST button is pressed — the device itself has failed
Full guide: Why Is My RCD Tripping? — causes, FAQs & expert advice

About Why Is My RCD Tripping?

RCD tripping is caused by earth leakage — most often a faulty appliance, moisture inside a fitting or cable, degraded wiring insulation, or cumulative leakage across shared circuits. If tripping repeats or returns after resetting, you have an active fault that can cause electrocution or fire; call 0433 462 902 or book a diagnostic before resetting again. Every trip must be treated as real: RCDs are the single most important shock-protection device in your switchboard.

Sydney Electrical Service handles RCD diagnostics 24/7 across every Sydney suburb — from older Federation cottages in Marrickville and Annandale to high-rise strata in Pyrmont and Zetland. Northern Beaches outdoor entertaining areas face accelerated insulation breakdown from salt air and weather, making them a frequent source of hard-to-trace earth leakage.

What to Do Right Now in Mascot

  1. Open the switchboard. Find the tripped RCD (the toggle will be in the middle position, or fully OFF).
  2. Switch every breaker downstream of that RCD to OFF.
  3. Reset the RCD to ON. It should now hold because no circuits are live.
  4. Switch breakers back on one at a time with a 30-second pause between each.
  5. The breaker that re-trips the RCD is the faulty circuit.
  6. Unplug everything on that circuit and try again.
  7. If the RCD holds, plug appliances back in one at a time to find the offender.
  8. If it doesn't hold with everything unplugged, the fault is in the fixed wiring or a hardwired appliance — leave it OFF and call us.

Electrical work in Mascot

Mascot has changed faster than almost any inner-south suburb. The old grid of modest brick and fibro post-war cottages now sits alongside a wall of new high-density apartment towers thrown up around the station and along the airport corridor. So we deal with two very different jobs here: tired single-dwelling wiring on the older streets, and large strata blocks where the switchboard, sub-mains and metering all have to be handled to spec.

Mascot sits in the Ausgrid network. In the older homes that usually means swapping ceramic-fuse boards for a proper switchboard with RCDs, checking consumer mains that were never sized for ducted air-con and induction cooktops, and tidying decades of patched circuits. In the towers and townhouse complexes the demand runs the other way, toward three-phase supply, EV-charging provisions and body-corporate switchboard work. Our Level 2 accreditation covers the Ausgrid connection, metering and point-of-attachment side that those bigger jobs always need.

Common Questions

None — they are the same device. "Safety switch" is the colloquial Australian name for what AS/NZS 3000 calls a Residual Current Device.
Nuisance tripping is when an RCD trips without an obvious dangerous fault — usually because cumulative low-level leakage from several healthy appliances on one bank exceeds the 30 mA threshold. The fix is splitting circuits across more RCDs (RCBOs).
Yes — press the TEST button every three months. If the device does not trip, it has failed and must be replaced immediately. AS/NZS 3760 recommends three-monthly testing for residential installations.
Likely yes. The internal element insulation has degraded enough to leak to the metal body. Even if the appliance still "works," it is no longer safe to use until the element is replaced or the unit is retired.

Why Mascot Residents Choose Us

We've worked across every Inner South suburb from Surry Hills through to Mascot, and we know the strata common-property dynamics that typify the region. High-rise residential, converted-warehouse strata, and heritage-terrace conversions each have characteristic electrical work patterns.

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