so does any know what the procedure for using a 13amp plug powering a ccu, does anyone have any designs in mind
I have already told you what to do.so does any know what the procedure for using a 13amp plug powering a ccu, does anyone have any designs in mind
How do you think a Consumer Unit main switch is wired?thats what i would do, im just a little bit nervous as this my first time at attempting this own my won
No, earth pin wasn't connected to anything. I think you're right the first time to use the term TN-C-S. We don't count all the separate 'earths' that come off the DNO's PME system, so why do it when one comes off at the cutout? If the DNO taps an earth off the cable into my house 10 times, would that make it a TN-C-S-C-S-C-S-C-S-C-S-C-S-C-S-C-S-C-S-C-S-C-S? If we're saying in this situation that the cutout is the plug, and the main fuse a BS1362, then TN-C-S would be correct, wouldn't it?If it were true TN-C-S-C (actually TN-C-S-C-S, I suppose!), with the earth pin of the plug connected to the neutral (which I assume mfarrow didn't mean)
At the level of 'an installation', the point in terms of regs is that one is not allowed to have a CNE conductor beyond the origin of an installation. In other words, one isn't allowed any further 'C' beyond the cutout.I think you're right the first time to use the term TN-C-S. We don't count all the separate 'earths' that come off the DNO's PME system, so why do it when one comes off at the cutout?
I wouldn't have thought so. To change from 'C' to 'S' requires that the fault path to your house has to split from a combined one to a separate one. To go back to 'C' requires that those two separate conductors thyen re-combine (not allowed within installations). Even though the CNE which enters your house may have multiple routes to earth, as far as your supply is concerned, it's still just TN-C-S. That's how I see it, anyway!If the DNO taps an earth off the cable into my house 10 times, would that make it a TN-C-S-C-S-C-S-C-S-C-S-C-S-C-S-C-S-C-S-C-S-C-S?
Yes, but that's only in terms of that 'microcosm'.If we're saying in this situation that the cutout is the plug, and the main fuse a BS1362, then TN-C-S would be correct, wouldn't it?
That's true - although I have to say that I've rather lost faith in PME since westie told us how little it often meansOf course, depending on the type of supply, one might be creating a TN-C-S without the safety of PME, which it why caution should be observed; insulated CU; no Class I equipment etc.
Yes I agree, I'm just trying to see what transpires if we were to over-analyse what we're dealing withone isn't allowed any further 'C' beyond the cutout. To change from 'C' to 'S' requires that the fault path to your house has to split from a combined one to a separate one. To go back to 'C' requires that those two separate conductors then re-combine (not allowed within installations). Even though the CNE which enters your house may have multiple routes to earth, as far as your supply is concerned, it's still just TN-C-S. That's how I see it, anyway!
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