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davesparks
It just came into my head Dave, bit strong saying you hate kids though, you were one once ? :smiley2:
Hate as in I have a phobia of them. I cannot stand to be in close proximity to small children and babies.
It just came into my head Dave, bit strong saying you hate kids though, you were one once ? :smiley2:
Hate as in I have a phobia of them. I cannot stand to be in close proximity to small children and babies.
Considering that fault currents can be in the thousands of amps it will probably take a fraction of a second for the eddy currents to become a problem. Don't forget current has more effects than just heating the conductor, the magnetic fields will cause mechanical stress at those levels.
exactly what i was getting at, the earth is only live during fault conditionsThought I would invest in the latest copy of Guidance note 1, Selection & Erection. Curious, I looked up 'Ferromagnetic enclosures, cable entering; (521.5.1) All the conductors of a circuit should generally follow the same route. Live cables of the same circuit may cause overheating if they enter a ferromagnetic enclosure through different openings (page 97, 7.4)
exactly what i was getting at, the earth is only live during fault conditions
So are the wylex tail glands with the 2 holes only not be used then?
Hate as in I have a phobia of them. I cannot stand to be in close proximity to small children and babies.
That's an unusual one, I have the same problem with snakes.:smile5:
When the SWA is used as the CPC outside the box, and a length of 6491X lugged onto the banjo bolt serves on the inside, the low resistance path connecting them together is via the brass of the banjo and the bolt, rather than through the enamelled steel enclosure which might make relatively poor contact and is of lower conductivity compared to the brass. So in the event of a fault the banjo bolt carries most of the fault current through a separate hole.
What's the solution? Single hole banjo? Moebius bolt that goes through both holes and back to where it came from? Slot the banjo bolt hole across to the gland entry?![]()
That isn't true. There will be a certain amount of legitimate earth leakage from appliances. Don't forget that there is functional earthing as well as protective earthing.
And as pointed out, under fault conditions there could be a significant current flowing.
There is no functional earthing in a domestic installation.