Philipn
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Hello everyone
I'm not an electrician, but I was in the electrical business most of my working life before I retired. My background is electronics with the last few years working in industrial control systems - control engineering, etc - so I hope you will make allowances for me not being fully conversant with domestic electrical installations.
My question relates to checking ELI. My property, being rural, has TT earthing and I'd like to know how measure Ze as accurately as I can using my older loop tester - Robin KMP 4116DL. All this tester has is a mains lead and an earth probe. If I plug this into a socket in my house and carry out a test I get a reading of 120 ohms - providing it's on the 2k ohms range, lower settings will trip the RCD.
It seems to me that this method is not giving me a true Ze because of the parallel earth circuits that may be in place - although our water supply pipes are plastic and we don't have gas, so that may not be the case. For a true reading surely I need to disconnect the earth connection at the input and measure the impedance around the loop through ground to the incoming phase. Is this correct and, if so, how can I do that with my loop tester?
I'm not an electrician, but I was in the electrical business most of my working life before I retired. My background is electronics with the last few years working in industrial control systems - control engineering, etc - so I hope you will make allowances for me not being fully conversant with domestic electrical installations.
My question relates to checking ELI. My property, being rural, has TT earthing and I'd like to know how measure Ze as accurately as I can using my older loop tester - Robin KMP 4116DL. All this tester has is a mains lead and an earth probe. If I plug this into a socket in my house and carry out a test I get a reading of 120 ohms - providing it's on the 2k ohms range, lower settings will trip the RCD.
It seems to me that this method is not giving me a true Ze because of the parallel earth circuits that may be in place - although our water supply pipes are plastic and we don't have gas, so that may not be the case. For a true reading surely I need to disconnect the earth connection at the input and measure the impedance around the loop through ground to the incoming phase. Is this correct and, if so, how can I do that with my loop tester?