RCD Trips In Rain 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 and commercial pockets, a rain-related RCD trip can come from tired domestic wiring or from outdoor and shed circuits that cop the weather. Pinning down whether it's the house or an external run is the first job.

⚠ Stop — Call Immediately if You Notice Any of These:
  • A tingle when touching outdoor taps, metal balustrades, pool ladder, or BBQ
  • A buzzing or humming sound from any outdoor power point or garden light
  • Visible scorching or discolouration around an outdoor outlet
  • Water visibly entering a switchboard, particularly external boards on the side wall
  • Pool/spa equipment that hums but does not start, or starts then trips
  • A "smell of weather" mixed with electrical smell on the affected circuit
Full guide: Why Does My RCD Trip When It Rains? — causes, FAQs & expert advice

About Why Does My RCD Trip When It Rains?

An RCD that trips only during or after rain has moisture reaching a live conductor — typically through a cracked weatherproof power point, a failing garden-light fitting, or waterlogged pool equipment. That is a real earth fault, not a nuisance — the circuit is unsafe to use until the leak is fixed, so book a diagnostic online or call 0433 462 902 now.

It is one of the most common storm-season callouts we get across Sydney, peaking between November and March when east-coast lows and afternoon thunderstorms push horizontal rain into fittings never designed to handle weather from that angle. Sydney Electrical Service attends 24/7 across every Sydney postcode, so the fault can be found and the circuit restored before the next downpour.

What to Do Right Now in Mascot

  1. If rain is still falling, do not touch outdoor electrical equipment.
  2. Open the switchboard. Identify the tripped RCD.
  3. Turn off every breaker downstream of that RCD. Reset the RCD to ON.
  4. Bring breakers back on one at a time. The breaker that re-trips the RCD is the wet circuit.
  5. Leave that breaker OFF. Unplug everything on the circuit (outdoor power points, garden lights, pump equipment).
  6. Wait until the rain has stopped and the equipment has dried. Often the circuit will reset successfully on a dry day — but the fault has not gone away.
  7. Do not "tape over" the problem with silicone or waterproof bags. It is a temporary illusion of safety.
  8. Book a Level 2 electrician to find and repair the leak before the next storm.

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

The leakage path only exists when water is present. Cracked seals, perished cable jackets, or compromised gaskets remain electrically intact when dry, but water bridges the gap from active to earth and the RCD detects it instantly.
You can — but the underlying fault is not going to fix itself, and the next storm will trip the RCD again. Worse, water and electricity tend to make damage worse over time, not better.
Water inside an enclosure can take hours to fully bridge a gap, especially if it has dripped through ceiling material or seeped into a junction box. Some leaks only become severe enough to trip after the body of moisture has saturated the insulation.
They must be IP-rated for their location and have a properly functioning weatherproof cover. AS/NZS 3000 specifies minimum IP ratings for outdoor installations. Once the cover is missing, cracked, or warped, the rating is gone.

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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