There's more to the world than safety.What safety benefit is there in knowing whether a phase conductor is a permanent phase or a switched phase?
Kind Regards, John
There's more to the world than safety.What safety benefit is there in knowing whether a phase conductor is a permanent phase or a switched phase?
How do you intend to comply with BS 7671 whilst identifying a phase conductor in some other way?There's more to the world than safety.What safety benefit is there in knowing whether a phase conductor is a permanent phase or a switched phase?
Kind Regards, John
How do you intend to comply with BS 7671 whilst identifying a phase conductor in some other way?There's more to the world than safety.What safety benefit is there in knowing whether a phase conductor is a permanent phase or a switched phase?
Kind Regards, John
Which is a phase conductor, and should be identified as such. As it belongs to a single phase circuit, it must be brown.it is a switched phase conductor.
We're not talking about conductors in a flex though.Do you ever wire central heating systems or similar?
Alphanumeric is L, N, and E or the earth symbol. What is your point?What's the difference?
What colour is alphanumeric?
I wasn't saying in place of green/yellow. I was saying that it is the accepted marking. Alphanumeric can be used instead of colour - so it could be attached to a different colour.That, presumably, you may only attach L to brown wires and N to blue wires.
(There is no alphanumeric for protective conductors - must be G/Y.)
In the same way that the great majority of people over here usually does - by over-sleeving some other colour (usually blue, possibly black or grey, or maybe even some other colour) with brown sleeving at the terminations. Compliant with BS7671, but clearly functionally distinguishable from a plain brown-insulated conductor. As I implied, if I had to use twin brown for a switch, I would probably over-sleeve the brown with brown, for functional identification of the S/L.How do you intend to comply with BS 7671 whilst identifying a phase conductor in some other way?
Which is a phase conductor, and should be identified as such. As it belongs to a single phase circuit, it must be brown.it is a switched phase conductor.
What safety benefit is there in knowing whether a phase conductor is a permanent phase or a switched phase?
Whilst oversleeving another colour is compliant with BS 7671, let us not forget that BS 7671 does clearly state that the conductor should preferably be identifiable throughout its length. Really twin brown is the correct cable for such an application in a domestic premises and I see no reason not to use it (as do all contractors here who would never, ever, ever consider using anything else for that task).In the same way that the great majority of people over here usually does - by over-sleeving some other colour (usually blue, possibly black or grey, or maybe even some other colour) with brown sleeving at the terminations. Compliant with BS7671, but clearly functionally distinguishable from a plain brown-insulated conductor. As I implied, if I had to use twin brown for a switch, I would probably over-sleeve the brown with brown, for functional identification of the S/L.How do you intend to comply with BS 7671 whilst identifying a phase conductor in some other way?
Kind Regards, John
If that risk exists then earth it.What safety benefit is there in knowing whether a phase conductor is a permanent phase or a switched phase?
If you test a wire for dead and it is dead when you test it then
[1] a phase conductor will stay dead
[2] a switched phase conductor may become live if some one operates a switch somewhere
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