I have a problem with lighting protection in a charity in Zambia. The earthing is TT, i.e. earth pits or rods are provided for almost every building. I have measured the resistance of these and some are half to one ohm. But others are 100 ohm which is is dreadful and we are redigging these.
The wet season has loads of lightning and when this strikes the overhead 415V 3-phase incoming grid lines huge surges enter the property. All the 10kA max Surge Protection Devices (SPDs) fitted years ago to the live incomers in distribution boards are blown. The local electrician has replaced them with 20kA max ones and now included the neutrals too.
We are adding 4 lightning spikes on 13m tall poles to protect a few single storey buildings and will dig separate new earth pits for these. What is the advice on whether to connect these pits to the main ones? Some say keep them separate and some say connect up all earths to give equipotential bonding everywhere. Problem I see is that it’s all very well bonding it all together in a nice modern UK building with modern electrics. But the idea of putting thousands of amps into a one ohm pit means the pit briefly gets to thousands of volts (V=IR) wrt any other E, N or L wire. So if you bond that pit to the house earth and you are standing on the floor and touching the fridge, or worse still the fridge and a tap which is not bonded, there will be 1000s of volts on the fridge case, yet your feet and tap hand are nearly at zero. The SPDs will limit it somewhat by sending some surge back along the grid to the substation, but it’s still a lot of volts, albeit very brief.
If it were all truly equipotentiality bonded the whole house, floor, taps, etc. reach the same 1000s of volts so it does not matter. But in Zambia where the wiring is struggling to meet IEE regs of decades ago it’s going to be hard to get it all bonded without rebuilding the place and spending more money than they can afford. So are separate pits better for less well bonded buildings?
Also what wire size should be used for connecting the spikes to pits? The local electricians say 16mm2 whereas I have measured buildings in UK and elsewhere with copper straps of 30 to 50mm2 for their spikes. If the pit is half an ohm whether the connecting wire is 0.05 or 0.01 ohm seems rather irrelevant to me, so 16mm2 is fine. But will it simply vaporise when carrying 1000s of amps from a strike? On the other hand will it actually transmit 1000s of amps if the pit is half an ohm?
The wet season has loads of lightning and when this strikes the overhead 415V 3-phase incoming grid lines huge surges enter the property. All the 10kA max Surge Protection Devices (SPDs) fitted years ago to the live incomers in distribution boards are blown. The local electrician has replaced them with 20kA max ones and now included the neutrals too.
We are adding 4 lightning spikes on 13m tall poles to protect a few single storey buildings and will dig separate new earth pits for these. What is the advice on whether to connect these pits to the main ones? Some say keep them separate and some say connect up all earths to give equipotential bonding everywhere. Problem I see is that it’s all very well bonding it all together in a nice modern UK building with modern electrics. But the idea of putting thousands of amps into a one ohm pit means the pit briefly gets to thousands of volts (V=IR) wrt any other E, N or L wire. So if you bond that pit to the house earth and you are standing on the floor and touching the fridge, or worse still the fridge and a tap which is not bonded, there will be 1000s of volts on the fridge case, yet your feet and tap hand are nearly at zero. The SPDs will limit it somewhat by sending some surge back along the grid to the substation, but it’s still a lot of volts, albeit very brief.
If it were all truly equipotentiality bonded the whole house, floor, taps, etc. reach the same 1000s of volts so it does not matter. But in Zambia where the wiring is struggling to meet IEE regs of decades ago it’s going to be hard to get it all bonded without rebuilding the place and spending more money than they can afford. So are separate pits better for less well bonded buildings?
Also what wire size should be used for connecting the spikes to pits? The local electricians say 16mm2 whereas I have measured buildings in UK and elsewhere with copper straps of 30 to 50mm2 for their spikes. If the pit is half an ohm whether the connecting wire is 0.05 or 0.01 ohm seems rather irrelevant to me, so 16mm2 is fine. But will it simply vaporise when carrying 1000s of amps from a strike? On the other hand will it actually transmit 1000s of amps if the pit is half an ohm?