You want to move to a more civilised part of the world where electricity is provided 24/7, either that or keep more 50p coins handy
Sound to me that whatever you have on in your garage is causing a surge in electrity that is enough to trip the breaker. Rather than going 'up' in current value try a 'C' rated breaker that 'allows' the surge to subdue before tripping. Most Household RCD's are 'B' rated.
See this link... https://www.tlc-direct.co.uk/Products/HGNC116.html
Ah sorry misread the issue. They have a habit of doing that, you don't 'need' them is you are using a double insulated item such as a C-Tek, so change it for a regular socket/extension or use a extension cable like this...
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/161188397208
Oh, that's unfortunate. You'll have to install a dedicated UPS.
Sound to me that whatever you have on in your garage is causing a surge in electrity that is enough to trip the breaker. Rather than going 'up' in current value try a 'C' rated breaker that 'allows' the surge to subdue before tripping. Most Household RCD's are 'B' rated.
See this link... https://www.tlc-direct.co.uk/Products/HGNC116.html
Use guitar strings for the fuse wire, they last last longer.....
Get a new battery! It must be duff, I left mine for 2 weeks recently and it fired no problem!!!
Mine has a tracker too, not sure how much current a valve control unit draws when not in use. Still get a decent battery on it.
When you lose power at home, the ELCB on the extension that powers the C-Tek will trip off. Which means the GT will have a *very* flat battery when you go to start it. C
Solution is to drive the GT for at least 100 miles every day.