Incidentally there were power cuts in the surrounding homes at about the time the breaker will have tripped (due to road works and contractors damaging supply cables) but none of the neighbours had tripped breakers. Could a power cut (or more likely a surge as the power came on) cause a breaker to trip?
My opinion is yes (based on experience and talking to others): power cuts can cause things to trip (usually the RCDs, maybe the MCBs (but not the "Main Switch")).
As it happens we had a lot of power cuts here a few weeks back. When the power went off cleanly and came back on cleanly, the RCDs were fine. However, there were also cases where the power died down before going off, or flicked on/off rapidly (and so on), or did not come back on cleanly: then some RCDs tended to trip. Neighbours were, I was told, affected in the same way. The MCBs may have tripped also (I cannot recall). Eventually I switched off the "Main Switch" for the rest of the morning to save on the wear and tear.
There was also some "electrical work" locally a while back that caused RCDs to trip (that is, not just in my house); which suggests to me that things occurring outside of the house can also cause them to trip.
Talking of the effect on neighbours: a few winters back there were power fluctuations for a few days, then it went off and stayed off for several days (it took them a while to acknowledge/locate/fix the fault). The thing was, out in the street it was only every second (or was it every third? I cannot recall) house that had no power. The reason was, it seems, that each of the cables supplying the power ran to alternate houses and the fault was that one of these cables had "burned out" somewhere. So it is possible to have a power cut; but for neighbouring houses/houses across the road to have power/cleaner power.
1. How do we diagnose what is causing the trips? When the property is unoccupied we turn off as much as possible so the possible culprits would be the central heating system, the fridge/freezer, the burglar alarm, the HDR-2000T PVR and the telephone answering machine (plus anything I have forgotten). We have consulted an electrician who said trial and error was the only way; any more scientific test we could try?
We have our freezer on a completely separate circuit and consumer unit; and so far it has never tripped (except when the bulb inside blew); even with the "messy power" of a few weeks ago.
In case it ends up being deemed to be "power cut induced" trips: I think you need to unplug stuff as well (not just switch off) if you don't already. Extension leads and surge/filter strips and so on can all add to the "problem" (or be an item at fault). I did once have a surge/filter strip with an occasional problem (pre-conversion of house from fuse box to "consumer unit with RCDs/MCBs": but I used plugin RCDs at that time which made testing "easy")...
It is only a few years since I had the house wiring "tested"; I think it was like £175, so you could consider that in case there actually is a wiring fault?
The more scientific way: It would also be possible to have individual pieces of equipment and so on tested; its probably not really DIY as I think
sufficiently accurate equipment is still very expensive.
Other than that, "guided" trial and error appears to be the only way left when looking for a fault (including swapping out the RCD/MCB devices). As MikeSh said, you'll need to know which device(s) actually tripped and identify what is on each one to be able to plan a strategy (or it may even offer a clue). Some easy, some not. But it
sounds like, this is only a problem if there has been a power cut? (although I guess you could use the "Main Switch" to test; although that is a clean break test only)?
Are "the fridge/freezer, the burglar alarm, the HDR-2000T PVR and the telephone answering" all on the same ring (cumulative leakage)? If possible split them up. If they are not all on the same circuit, can you move any of them them? Divide and conquer. No "broadband"?
Your "consumer unit" should be labelled (as to what is on each RCD/MCB combo); although mine was found to be incorrect, so I had to test it all and relabel.
but none of the neighbours had tripped breakers.
I think it is likely to also be equipment dependant.
And, possibly, examples of other things might help to cause a problem/increase the "imbalance/leakage":
Birds/bats nesting on the down lighters in the loft.
Rodent has chewed on some cables.
Cat/Dog/other pet has chewed on an extension lead/power cord.
Earth loops?
Hope this all make sense and is correct (it was a simple reply to start with!).