That'll get the replies coming! (Oh look, here comes one now...)Paul Barker said:OK here's a plumbers reply
Nice way to remember it, but they actually stand for Combined and Separate, the separation originating at the cutout. (PME = Protective Multiple Earthing, the earth and neutral being combined in a single PEN conductor - Protective Earth & Neutral)...PME or TN-CS (Tera Neutral? CS stands for can't see, because the earth connection is hidden in the cutout...
The S still stands for separate. As you rightly say, the earthing is normally via the cable armour....TNS, which conversely you see...
Not necessarily; the earth bar inside a domestic CU is designed to do the duty of the MET....Now you need to buy a brass MET...
The subject of earthing and bonding - despite actually being very straightforward - is beset with all kinds of myths. There are hard and fast rules, but for some reason sparks like to believe they are open to interpretation.
The same rules apply to boilers, but here the gas fitters like to add their own bit of confusion....but don't forget that boilers are a weard situation which nobody in the field seems to understand correctly...
If it's got a Circuit Protective Conductor then EEBAD is still the principle means of protection. However the disconnection times are reduced for equipment with exposed conductive parts because of the lower resistance path of a body in direct contact with the general mass of the earth (reg 471-08-03)...anything outside the equipotential zone (outside the house, is no longer protected by the EEBADS system...
Because safety and convenience are entirely secondary considerations in electrical installations. As everybody knows, it's cost first, safety second. If you are rewiring it is easy, cost effective and far more convenient to provide a boiler with its own supply. It is also actually simpler to provide a greater number of circuits, rather than try to run fixed equipment from spurs on socket circuits.For cheap job (which is what your m8 is wanting I am quite sure), Just put combi on a spur off the kitchen ring
I hope you're not suggesting powering a shower from a ring final circuit? In any case the regs do not actually require a shower to be on an RCD (although the manufacturers usually do) but most sparks will RCD-protect all sockets anyway, as you went on to suggest.Upstairs ring doesn't need rcd unless there is a likelyhood of a shower in a bedroom at a future date in which case plan ahead...
Having said all that, not a bad stab... for a plumber.
