Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Looking for a smarter way to manage your heating this winter? We’ve been testing the new Aqara Radiator Thermostat W600 to see how quiet, accurate and easy it is to use around the home. Click here read our review.
Exactly - but Risteard appeared to be suggesting that many do run a G/Y single alongside 4-core SWA - so who are 'they' (presumably not DIYers or DIs)? ... or did I misunderstand him?
Fair enough. In that case, either I misunderstood Risteard or else his experiences are different from yours.
Returning to single-phase, one question I've asked in one of these threads has not be answered. Do I take it that you accept that, in a PME installation, reliance on SWA armour as a main bonding conductor is not compliant with BS7671unless the SWA is at least 70mm²? If so, does that mean that, if bonding is required (e.g. in an outbuilding with extraneous-c-ps), you would not export the PME earth but, instead, would TT whatever is on the end of the SWA?
Possibly - although whenever the issue is debated here, the arguments are usually to do with issues other than cost.
If one wants to be compliant with what the regs "actually say", in the common situation we see being discussed here, of a domestic outbuilding (with extraneous-c-ps) (and PME), I really can't see anyone in their right mind installing ≥70mm² SWA so that they could use the armour as a bonding conductor. In that situation, presumably they would either TT the outbuilding, use a core of the SWA (if ≥10mm²) or run a separate bonding conductor. Which of those would be the cheapest, I'm not sure - usually TTing, I imagine.
I think you have all pointed out it's not as simple as just connect up a cable and all is fine. I remember a friend being demoted for using an SWA cable with the armour as an earth to feed a container being used as a workshop when some one got a shock when moving it on a crane a few feet to squeeze in another container.
To me to lift a container which still connected to electric power was crazy, but the enquiry felt the cables earth was not good enough in that it relied on the SWA not being pulled out of the gland.
Working with Germans they questioned why we run earth wires strapped to side of cable rather than select a cable with an extra core. I really could not give them a good answer.
Having gone around factories where the earth from the SWA had been lost, clearly some where under the road way the cable had been damaged and water over the years had converted the SWA into iron oxide I can see the reason for using copper earth specially where it is unlikely regular tests are done to ensure the earth loop impedance is still within limits.
One Midlands council use to employ a friend of mine to test and record the insulation resistance of the SWA to earth so if any company digging damaged the cable they could show who had damaged it and claim for cost to repair. It seems damage from diggers was becoming too costly, I was rather surprised I had expected concentric to have been used. May be it is the rust problem why concentric is used by DNO?
But if I had posted the question by now I would be completely baffled by the replies.
To me to lift a container which still connected to electric power was crazy, but the enquiry felt the cables earth was not good enough in that it relied on the SWA not being pulled out of the gland.
Yes, as I observed somewhere, relying on SWA means relying on 'plumbing fittings' to maintain continuity - although that presumably is very rarely a problem (in the absence of 'crazy behaviour')!
Working with Germans they questioned why we run earth wires strapped to side of cable rather than select a cable with an extra core. I really could not give them a good answer.
If one wants/needs to run a copper earth, it is obviously 'neater' to use a core (if it has large enough CSA). A separate earth conductor without any mechanical protection would presumably be more vulnerable to mechanical damage than a core (protected by armour), particularly if buried.
Having gone around factories where the earth from the SWA had been lost, clearly some where under the road way the cable had been damaged and water over the years had converted the SWA into iron oxide I can see the reason for using copper earth specially where it is unlikely regular tests are done to ensure the earth loop impedance is still within limits.
Copper 'armour' would afford a lot less mechanical protection than steel. If that were not believed, and the only point of the 'armour' was to provide an 'earthed sheath' (to make it very likely that penetration would result in a protective device operating), then I don't think SWA would ever have come into being - we'd just be using cable with an outer earthed copper foil, or somesuch.
I wouldn't go as far as saying that I don't trust the glands - but it is a pretty unusual (unique?) way of establishing an electrical connection. Tightening a brass gland nut onto a whole pile of steel strands is perhaps not ideal, and I have certainly come across gland nuts which were (had become?) quite 'loose'', haven't you?
That would seem electrically appropriate, although I don't know how the mechanical protection afforded by copper pipe would compare with that afforded by steel strand armour. As you say, CSA would be fine for bonding. Even 15mm copper pipe, with 1mm wall thickness, would have a CSA of about 23mm². FWIW, some of the outside wiring I inherited in my house consisted of T+E within copper pipe (with standard plumbing fittings).
What about tightening a brass bush onto a steel tube?
That would seem electrically appropriate, although I don't know how the mechanical protection afforded by copper pipe would compare with that afforded by steel strand armour.
My point didn't primarily relate to the materials. Tightening a bush/whatever onto any sort of tube is a different kettle of fish from tightening it onto a pile of strands (of whatever).
That would seem electrically appropriate, although I don't know how the mechanical protection afforded by copper pipe would compare with that afforded by steel strand armour.
Indeed - but, as I said earlier in my post, if the mechanical protection provided by SWA armour were not regarded as being worthwhile, it would probably never have come into being, and we would just be using cables with an outer earthed foil or suchlike.
If you need to find a tradesperson to get your job done, please try our local search below,
or if you are doing it yourself you can find suppliers local to you.
Select the supplier or trade you require, enter your location to begin your search.
Please select a service and enter a location to continue...
Are you a trade or supplier? You can create your listing free at DIYnot Local