Garage Supply - 2 way metal consumer unit in a seperate garage | Page 2 | on ElectriciansForums

Discuss Garage Supply - 2 way metal consumer unit in a seperate garage in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

Dunc88

-
Joined
Mar 22, 2017
Messages
29
Reaction score
4
Location
West Midlands
Hi,
I'm installing a 2 way metal consumer unit in a seperate garage, the earthing arrangement in the property is TNCS. I am planning to install a new 4mm2 ciruit from the main consumer unit in the house, in 4mm2 swa to a garage consumer unit (5M run of cable).
There are no extraneous-conductive parts in the garage, so can I gland this swa directly into the garage consumer unit and have an RCD main switch feeding 1x 16a & 1x6a mcb? If so, how do I prevent both RCD's tripping (garage & main consumer unit)?
Would RCBO's still trip the RCD back in the main consumer unit?
Could I turn the garage into its own TT system? I could gland the swa into an adaptable box next to the garage consumer unit, & join the earth from the 4mm core to the swa inside that box, carrying the Live & Neutral through into the garage consumer unit, from there I would take a seperate earth down to an earth spike.
Thoughts/advice please!
Cheers
 
Well Dunc,It seems to be going round in circles in this thread
The 64K dollar question,can you feed it from a non Rcd protected mcb or no :)

Add
How has the twin and earth feed to the adaptable box been wired
 
But as per telectrix why doesn't he feed from an mcb in the house - he's using armoured so no rcd protection needed.

Yes fully agree with not tt'ing.

I've got 14 ways at the main consumer unit, all of which are protected by the 2x rcds (7 & 7), so the 4mm comes from one of those mcbs, I was just hoping to avoid it tripping at the house (& knocking off other circuits) but because there is no space for an rcbo/none rcd protected mcb it looks like i'm going to have to just use a main switch & mcb's in the garage and deal with it if a fault does ever occur. To be honest i'm only having a few twin sockets & a couple of lights, just being over cautious!
 
Well Dunc,It seems to be going round in circles in this thread
The 64K dollar question,can you feed it from a non Rcd protected mcb or no :)

Add
How has the twin and earth feed to the adaptable box been wired

Tricky one isnt it!
I took a 4mm t&e from the mcb and buried it in the wall before drilling it and feeding it directly into the back of the adaptable box on the external wall...
 
time delayed rcd in the house protecting the garage circuit, that way the rcd in the garage consumer unit will trip first.

The op has already said the cu is a dual RCD unit with no spare ways - how is adding a time delay going to improve the situation? And why do people think by TTing a shed or garage would prevent the house cu RCD tripping?
 
Replace one rcd with the delay one? OP wants to avoid the garage potentially tripping an rcd in the house, so if there's a short in the garage the garage cons unit should trip before the house one if it's a timer delay one. On a 5m run it's not that big a deal to have to flick a switch in the house c.u. We recently did a farm shed that was about 120m from the main supply and that's what we did - time delayed rcd in house c.u. and normal rcd in the shed. 16mm cable to run the power to the shed because of the length of run with voltage drop.
 
Shame it's not a high integrity dual rcd board, I just installed a similar set-up, but used an mcb to protect the 4mm swa for the garage which had a 63A RCD main switch with 2 mcbs in the unit.
Never been a fan of large consumer units with no none RCD ways.
 
Replace one rcd with the delay one? OP wants to avoid the garage potentially tripping an rcd in the house, so if there's a short in the garage the garage cons unit should trip before the house one if it's a timer delay one. On a 5m run it's not that big a deal to have to flick a switch in the house c.u. We recently did a farm shed that was about 120m from the main supply and that's what we did - time delayed rcd in house c.u. and normal rcd in the shed. 16mm cable to run the power to the shed because of the length of run with voltage drop.
Because it would make the other existing circuits non compliant
 
The only thing that's not been mentioned and I'm sure someone will correct me, I was told by an ELECSA assesor that you're not allowed to export a TNCS earth in less than 10mm cable. So, as you can't get an mcb unprotected in the house consumer unit, have a main switch in your garage consumer unit and put an earth rod in to earth your garage consumer unit.
 

Reply to Garage Supply - 2 way metal consumer unit in a seperate garage in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

News and Offers from Sponsors

  • Article
Join us at electronica 2024 in Munich! Since 1964, electronica has been the premier event for technology enthusiasts and industry professionals...
    • Like
Replies
0
Views
296
  • Sticky
  • Article
Good to know thanks, one can never have enough places to source parts from!
Replies
4
Views
804
  • Article
OFFICIAL SPONSORS These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then...
Replies
0
Views
841

Similar threads

  • Question
What is the distance from the point outside the house to the shed?
Replies
8
Views
770
  • Question
Yes, I was referring to simple installations such as domestic as that is what the thread is about. I also said should rather than must because I...
2
Replies
16
Views
2K
davesparks
D

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Electrician Courses Green Electrical Goods PCB Way Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Pushfit Wire Connectors Electric Underfloor Heating Electrician Courses
These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then CLICK HERE and post a thread with who you are, and we'll send you some stats etc

YOUR Unread Posts

This website was designed, optimised and is hosted by untold.media Operating under the name Untold Media since 2001.
Back
Top