On an EICR I found a 200 amp 3ph supply, TNS earthing (which looks original) and Ze of 19 ohms. No rods. No RCDs.
L1 -> N was about 0.5 ohms. Other phases were similar.
So I reported this Ze to DNO.
According to customers, they came out the next day, confirmed my reading, but said there was nothing wrong with it and no action would be taken.
This is a first for me. I was out of my usual patch and it was UKPN. I've mainly experienced SP who have always taken anything like this very seriously and acted swiftly.
My only argument seems to be that they provided an earth once that must have been deemed acceptable, and therefore this earth should be maintained.
That said, as far as I'm aware DNO's are not obliged to meet any particular value, the Energy Networks Association P23 guidance document seems to just contain typical values that a certain percentage of supplies will meet. It feels as though an upstream cable repair has left the lead sheath floating.
So the question is, do I argue and persist, or get busy designing RCD-based fault protection at the customers expense? (It's a multi board installation with a bus-bar chamber at the origin and it's not going to be trivial.)
L1 -> N was about 0.5 ohms. Other phases were similar.
So I reported this Ze to DNO.
According to customers, they came out the next day, confirmed my reading, but said there was nothing wrong with it and no action would be taken.
This is a first for me. I was out of my usual patch and it was UKPN. I've mainly experienced SP who have always taken anything like this very seriously and acted swiftly.
My only argument seems to be that they provided an earth once that must have been deemed acceptable, and therefore this earth should be maintained.
That said, as far as I'm aware DNO's are not obliged to meet any particular value, the Energy Networks Association P23 guidance document seems to just contain typical values that a certain percentage of supplies will meet. It feels as though an upstream cable repair has left the lead sheath floating.
So the question is, do I argue and persist, or get busy designing RCD-based fault protection at the customers expense? (It's a multi board installation with a bus-bar chamber at the origin and it's not going to be trivial.)