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Deleted member 26818
Definitely needs a KISS.
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Discuss Multi-core neutrals and earth in the Electrical Wiring, Theories and Regulations area at ElectriciansForums.net
Great principle to adhere to. Also, never assume as it tends to make an ‘---’ out of ‘u’ and ‘me’Definitely needs a KISS.
It is more of a parallel conductor design than being a shared neutral in my opinion. The person I am working for is electrically qualified and this is how he said we wire it. I am unsure that is the reason I am asking here.
In this configuration it is impossible to get a dangerous voltage on the neutral so long as the neutral is terminated in the consumer unit, same as any circuit. It is not like a situation when you borrow a neutral from a different lighting circuit. It is not a dangerous configuration.
It is not a parallel conductor design, that would be a single circuit spread over multiple conductors.
The regulations prohibit the use of a shared neutral conductor in the manner you are suggesting.
It is dangerous, if someone was to isolate one of these supplies and disconnect the neutral at any point in the circuit where it may not be obvious what you have done the disconnected neutral will become live.
Any EICR carried out in the future will identify this as potentially dangerous and you could have a very angry customer coming back to you, taking legal action against you or generally ruining any good reputation you may have.
This plan is also a bad idea from a common sense point of view, any person working on the circuit in the future may need to isolate up to 5 circuits to carry out work on one of them safely . So you end up with a situation where you have to isolate an alarm and two gates to repair or extend an apparently unrelated lighting circuit.
Reply to Multi-core neutrals and earth in the Electrical Wiring, Theories and Regulations area at ElectriciansForums.net