thought you lived in caves in bolton till WW2.
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Discuss New Consumer Unit in the Talk Electrician area at ElectriciansForums.net
Never seen a 1930's built house with T&G floorboards, T&G floorboards came in much later like 25 years or so later. In the 30's they would have been pretty thick standard butt floorboards, built to last rather than the much thinner early T&G floorboards, that are even thinner these day's. That's if you get to have floorboards it's now all sheet boarding...
Pipe down you!thought you lived in caves in bolton till WW2.
I have to disagree on this one too ... there is no sign of the wholesale lifting and removal of the floorboards in my house, 1876 vintage T&G and well over an inch thick! The really sad thing is having to cut into good timber to deal with the Dry Rot! Most of it has ~ 32 growth rings per inch and is sounder than anything that you can get in the builders' merchants today.
Well all i can say is that you are a ''One Off'' then!! But i suspect that the flooring has been professionally refurbished by artisans sometime in it's past. I wonder how in 1876 they found it cost effective to T&G 1 inch plus floorboards?? Did they have the machinery to produce T&G, i don't know??
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I was going off of UKPN documentation,
Yes it is TNC-S at the head or origin, of which there is only one.
Now according to BS7671 each flat is an installation in it's own right, as you rightly say they are bonded locally inside each flat as you would do if it was a separate install like any other.
If you are classing each flat as a separate install as above then technically that flat is a TNS, there is no CNE link at that head, the earthing to that flat is separate, yes it is derived from a TNC-S supply, now either that flat is classed as a separate installation or it isn't.
Well it's not TN-S is it, so can't be classed as such!!
Being a separate installation does not mean the supply suddenly chances from PME to TN-S
This is where the complication is, that flat has technically a SNE (separate Neutral Earth) however the bonding requirements are to be taken as TNC-S, it is where the boundary is actually drawn, either at the flats own service head as per BS7671 with it's own bonding requirement as you
yourself pointed out above, or the whole block of flats classed as one installation.
It's no different than any large PME installation that comprises of multiple sub-main distribution circuits none of those sub-mains can or will be classed as a TN-S installation.
It is all semantics really as the definitions of where each part overlaps, I called it a hybrid in "" as it is not always clear where the demarcation point begins and ends as far as we are concerned, our remit is only to BS7671, it does not extend beyond the suppliers cut out which may (or may not) be present in that flat.
There is no demarcation as far as the type of supply provided by the DNO. If it's a PME supply then it will remain a PME installation throughout the installation derived from that supply. The neutral of that DNO supply still being the source of the only electrical earth throughout the whole installation....
I already said if I was replacing a CU in that flat that even though it would be technically (and correctly) a Zs but would record it as that flats Ze on the EIC, because that is where that particular dwelling/installation according to BS7671 ends (or rather begins ), the chances are we would have no access to the supplier switch gear anyway, in other words treat that flat as a separate entity, which is about all we can do.
It's only a separate entity in the fact that each flat is separately metered installation.
How can you call or record a Zs/Zdb value as Ze when it's clearly NOT? If you can't gain access to the main DNO supply then you record that on any certificate you need to produce
The UKPN documents go a lot further than a simple block of flats, one example given is a modern industrial estate, now previously each separate unit had it's own CNE link in each (separate) building all bonded to the various services shared between seperate buildings, and was designated as a TNC-S/PME to that building, which is fair enough so far.
That's because they would be separate buildings, and each joint to the network distribution cable supplying each building would or should have the neutral conductor earthed, as stipulated in the PME requirements...
The DNO (UKPN in this case) has/had decided in an effort to reduce circulating N -E currents to put just one CNE link at the supply end (sub-station/switchroom or whatever) and supply each unit with an SNE (TNS) supply, however again for the usual reason where PME is concerned (broken suppliers N etc.) that the bonding requirements for these units will be as per TNC-S.
This is similar to above but on a bigger scale
Then that is NOT a PME system is it, it's a straight TN-S system. Every TN-S system has a single point N-E connection at the TX or main switch board.... If the neutral is not being used as a combined neutral earthing conductor on the system, then PME/TNC-S bonding requirements is not required....
Ps. I already said in the post of mine you quoted, or in one the others related to that subject that the DNO classed the flats supply as TNC-S/PME as far as bonding was concerned and rightfully so in my opinion, so I am not sure where or if you are disagreeing with me or not lol.
... aren't we all ... 'One Off' unique in every way! To be celebrated for that which we bring to life.
On the construction front, I have no other point of reference as I have yet to get outside of my own house to others of similar ilk ... with the original floorboards still in! We dismantled the roof of a similar vintage property up the road, but the original floorboards were long since replaced as it was converted into a pub. We recovered: half a roof of diminished course Ballachulish slate, Scottish quarries in Glencoe closed in ~ 1950; 187? sarking boards and roof timbers, slight woodworm damage though almost half of rafters butchered by aforesaid conversion. We also managed to recover the dressed stone from the 3 Dormer Windows. When the demolition crew moved in almost 6 months later we recovered ~ 90 % of the sandstone.
Stop back peddling!! lolWhat i'm basically saying is, that T&G floorboards were not a common entity to be found in the 1930's or beyond. Maybe on the up market properties of the era, but not on normal builds, it wouldn't have made any economical sense whatsoever. I've personally never seen original 1'' T&G flooring on a 30's or beyond house, it seems some of you have..... Block/parquet flooring is a totally different kettle of fish....
Stop back peddling!! lol
Not back pedaling at all, i personally haven't ever seen T&G flooring on such old properties, it's always been well laid decent thickness butt floorboards. It seems some here have, now whether or not they have been refurbished at sometime in the past is another matter...
I've worked in plenty of old properties in up market area's like West London and the Suburbs and rarely will you find T&G Floorboards.
Maybe other area's around the country are different.
and my dad's 1926 built semi had cavity walls. now that's unusual too for the year. unfortunately the wall ties were not galv or s/s so rusted.
Sounds similar to mine, a common fault in my area is the outer leaf bellowing out a little where the ties have rotted awayand my dad's 1926 built semi had cavity walls. now that's unusual too for the year. unfortunately the wall ties were not galv or s/s so rusted.
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