Hi,
Regarding discrimination requirements in regs..
If a second cu is fitted in a shed or outbuilding supplied by an rcd protected way at the main cu then it provides protection at a change of cable size due to the mcbs but that leaves two rcds in series with no discrimination. However is this a problem? I see several options each with advantages and disadvantages:
1 rcd at both supply and in outbuilding
- more cost, no discrimanation,
+redundancy/diversity in protection
Potential for local rcd to trip and this may be better than having rcd solely at the main cu as there is chance local fault would trip local cu rather than main cu
Supplu cable rcd protected (although not strictly required if selected /installed correctly)
2 supply fed from non rcd protected supply with local rcd protected cu in outbuding
+good discrimination
- no rcd protection of supply cable. (however not required if selection/installation of supply cable is compliant)
3 fed from rcd protected supply in main cu with non rcd protected cu in outbuilding with appropriately sized mcbs to provide overcurrent protection
+ potentially cheaper, supply cable protected (although again not strictly required)
- if rcd trips depending on main cu could take other circuits out, at the very least requires going back to main cu to reset in event of spurious trip
Looking at the options I kind of prefer option 1 but it's extra cost but has some maybe marginal benefits. Any thoughts?
Regarding discrimination requirements in regs..
If a second cu is fitted in a shed or outbuilding supplied by an rcd protected way at the main cu then it provides protection at a change of cable size due to the mcbs but that leaves two rcds in series with no discrimination. However is this a problem? I see several options each with advantages and disadvantages:
1 rcd at both supply and in outbuilding
- more cost, no discrimanation,
+redundancy/diversity in protection
Potential for local rcd to trip and this may be better than having rcd solely at the main cu as there is chance local fault would trip local cu rather than main cu
Supplu cable rcd protected (although not strictly required if selected /installed correctly)
2 supply fed from non rcd protected supply with local rcd protected cu in outbuding
+good discrimination
- no rcd protection of supply cable. (however not required if selection/installation of supply cable is compliant)
3 fed from rcd protected supply in main cu with non rcd protected cu in outbuilding with appropriately sized mcbs to provide overcurrent protection
+ potentially cheaper, supply cable protected (although again not strictly required)
- if rcd trips depending on main cu could take other circuits out, at the very least requires going back to main cu to reset in event of spurious trip
Looking at the options I kind of prefer option 1 but it's extra cost but has some maybe marginal benefits. Any thoughts?