High Zs reading

Hello,

looking for some advice on 2 things please.

Ive tested a ring main in a house with RCD protection, the results ive had are

L-L .43
N-N . 41
E-E 1.17

I had a look for a loose connection but can’t find anything, how high does the CPC reading need to be before you would consider it ‘to high’?

the second question is regarding the same circuit, they have a fuse spur fed from one of the sockets and then have 6 x double sockets after the fuse spur. The last 3 are out door and the last socket on the ‘radial’ gives a Zs reading of 1.64.

Am I right in saying max Zs should be 1.08? Is the high reading due to the distance on the run after the fuse spur?

Is the reading acceptable?

the reading on all sockets were lower than .71 until the last 3 outside which are run using SWA cable.

thanks
 
It says on the inside of my EICR certificate book that 1.08 is the max Zs value allowed on a type B 32 amp MCB. Is that correct?

if the radial off the ring via the spur is higher than 1.08 but less than the allowed value after a 13amp fuse, which value would you write on the test form?
Thanks
Yes, that would be the correct limit for the ring and the spur up to the fuse.

From the fuse onwards, it isn't protected by the mcb, but by the fuse, so you need to use the appropriate value for that, think it's about 80% of 2.3 ohm, I haven't got my book around.

As for the eic/eicr depends on your software, but I would add an additional line below the rfc entry (no circuit in the cu) detailing the radial off the rfc as a seperate entity but not from the cu mcb

The use of 2.5/1.0 was around the metric versions of the 14th I think, way more than 15 years ago unless there was another phase of use
 
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Yes, that would be the correct limit for the ring and the spur up to the fuse.

From the fuse onwards, it isn't protected by the mcb, but by the fuse, so you need to use the appropriate value for that, think it's about 80% of 2.3 ohm, I haven't got my book around.

As for the eic/eicr depends on your software, but I would add an additional line below the rfc entry (no circuit in the cu) detailing the radial off the rfc as a seperate entity but not from the cu mcb

The use of 2.5/1.0 was around the 14th I think, way more than 15 years ago unless there was another phase of use
Thank you for your help.
 
I think I should look again for the loose connection on the CPC, I’m pretty sure the cable is 2.5-1.5.

does the result have to be within 1.67 or is it allowed to be slightly over? I was told 1.67 is what we would expect to see so when would you start to look into it?
 
I think I should look again for the loose connection on the CPC, I’m pretty sure the cable is 2.5-1.5.

does the result have to be within 1.67 or is it allowed to be slightly over? I was told 1.67 is what we would expect to see so when would you start to look into it?

Typically MFTs are +/- 0.05 ohm.

So if the calculated value was say 0.41 x 1.667 = 0.683 ohm. The it could be exactly this and measure anything between 0.633 and 0.733

In reality the values could be a bit wider to account for bad contacts etc.

Switching the socket on/off a few times, and plugging/unplugging can bring it down

So it's a matter of what you think is reasonable
 
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Jacko,
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Wilko,
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