You know I have the attention span of a goldfish mateyeah....thats what i was getting at in post 23 TQ......
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Discuss More than one circuit on a breaker; what code, plz! in the Periodic Inspection Reporting & Certification area at ElectriciansForums.net
You know I have the attention span of a goldfish mateyeah....thats what i was getting at in post 23 TQ......
[/FONT]so the board would be a 4 anyway unless the bathroom is fed from this board without any RCD protection and no supplementary bonding....then its a 2.....
It's two circuits up until the point it's inserted into the breaker, that's the point in time it becomes one circuit.
No, I wouldn't. Neither is that what I said.So if it's a RFC with a spur fed from the origin then you consider that to be 2 circuits after the MCB/fuse?
It's one circuit.
It doesn't ever, have you read what I posted yet (properly!)?At what point does a single protective device supply 2 circuits, bearing in mind the definition of 'circuit'?
Edit - you posted clarity above as I was typing this.
Read the post Gary.....no supplementary bonding and no RCD.......The board itself is a code 4 or 2 due to what the circuits supply?
I'd totally dismiss a PIR if I saw a comment like that on it.
In case it's not clear what I'm saying, (it's probably not). The difference is in the dead versus live testing. You SHOULD dead test as two circuits and live test as one.....that'll cause some more debate!
It doesn't ever, have you read what I posted yet (properly!)?
It's two circuits up until the point it's inserted into the breaker, that's the point in time it becomes one circuit.
Because that's how they were designed in the first place, they only become one circuit when they are placed into the common breaker.Hi TQ
why would you test as two circuits for dead testing?
cheers
Read the post Gary.....no supplementary bonding and no RCD.......
Yes GaryM, if I was to consider the circumstances under which someone (who remains nameless) decided to put two separate circuits into one breaker, that's exactly how I would test it dead. Of course if it's say an RFC with spur then Zs etc would most likely be higher on the spur portion, but that would be derived from the live testing of the circuit (singular). Most likely this would be a temporary solution and at some point the expectation would be to separate them, hence I would test it accordingly.Just this
You consider a change from 2 to 1 circuit at somepoint.
so if extranious conductive parts in the bathroom for instance (pipework) are not given supplementary bonding in an installation being fed from a non RCD protected board thats not a 2 is it? and does the board feeding it not require improvement?...or at least put an RCD connection unit to feed the bathroom circuit/s....then the board becomes a 4.....That's a defect for the circuit(s), not the board in general.
Reply to More than one circuit on a breaker; what code, plz! in the Periodic Inspection Reporting & Certification area at ElectriciansForums.net