using your knowledge of regs, and design of a circuit/s , you install radial or ring accordingly. not bloody rocket science, is it? 2nd ywar apprentice should know all this.
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Discuss Ring Final Circuit (RFC) versus Radial. Yes, again. in the Electrical Engineering Chat area at ElectriciansForums.net
They should, the evidence is they don't.2nd year apprentice should know all this.
Radial.Those are good points about fault tolerance. In these days of RCD everywhere it might be less of an aspect, but I have seen an RFC with open CPC (r2) and all sockets still had an acceptable CPC to meet ADS so remained safe.
On a radial with open CPC the first you would know (other than a sparky testing it) might be last you ever knew!
Bit ott mainline, don't recall millions of caused by ring circuit.Radial.
Break in CPC = socket outlet with no CPC = risk of electric shock = RCD disconnect when imbalance occurs.
Break in ring final = no detection of fault as only one line conductor has slipped out = 2 x 2.5 mm cables with a best case scenario current carrying capacity of 27A (surface clipped) protected by a 32A MCB = Overloaded cable = House Fire = Death
Me neither, it's probably something to do with cables overheating.Bit ott mainline, don't recall millions of caused by ring circuit.
It does say in the OSG that the loads are assumed to be distributed for RFCs, however I believe the RFC has actually been designed with the entire load placed at the exact mid-point of the ring:The eagle-eyed reader will note in the OSG that for the RFC the loads are assumed to be distributed, for the radial it is end-point.
Agreed. Though it's astonishing what well terminated 2.5 sq mm can actually carry if it has to. e.g. the shower I referred to earlier.Radial.
Break in CPC = socket outlet with no CPC = risk of electric shock = RCD disconnect when imbalance occurs.
Break in ring final = no detection of fault as only one line conductor has slipped out = 2 x 2.5 mm cables with a best case scenario current carrying capacity of 27A (surface clipped) protected by a 32A MCB = Overloaded cable = Possibility of a fire.
A loose connection on a radial is more than likely going to cause problems with appliances etc downstream.I've had thought that a mid-point loose N on a radial could be a slightly more dangerous prospect than any loose conductor on a ring, but I won't die on my sword over this discussion!
Poor installation and botched alterations ruin anything and everything though.Once a Ring is Infected with numerous spurs on spurs on spurs , it can no longer be called a Ring and must be called a Spider circuit which needs to added to the 19th Edition assuming Rings aren't outlawed before that
Poor installation and botched alterations ruin anything and everything though.
That is a bit dramatic. If you look at the worst case, say 50% above CCC of one leg then you are looking at 50% extra (x 1.5) on just one conductor of that leg, so instead of I2R heating of 125% more (1.5 * 1.5 = 2.25) you are looking at more like 1.625 more heating, and from the usual 30C to 70C cable design that puts your conductor probably just above 95C.Break in ring final = no detection of fault as only one line conductor has slipped out = 2 x 2.5 mm cables with a best case scenario current carrying capacity of 27A (surface clipped) protected by a 32A MCB = Overloaded cable = Possibility of a fire.
Thanks, that is good to see the workings.It does say in the OSG that the loads are assumed to be distributed for RFCs, however I believe the RFC has actually been designed with the entire load placed at the exact mid-point of the ring:
That is a bit dramatic. If you look at the worst case, say 50% above CCC of one leg then you are looking at 50% extra (x 1.5) on just one conductor of that leg, so instead of I2R heating of 125% more (1.5 * 1.5 = 2.25) you are looking at more like 1.625 more heating, and from the usual 30C to 70C cable design that puts your conductor probably just above 95C.
Is this good for the cable? Clearly not, but it is far far away from starting a fire. In fact it is well below the 160C upper limit taken for adiabatic heating without cable damage (e.g. Table 54.3) so what you are looking at really is a loss of useful cable life.
I have no idea what the factor needed for the Arrhenius equation is for PVC cable but usually it is a halving of component life for every 10-20C increase in temperature (assuming nothing dramatic happens like a fire!) so taking the cable on the faulty RFC as running 25C above specification you are looking at probably a quarter of its nominal 25 year life.
But who can afford to run their RFC at 32A or so for a long time? At today's cost that is something like 2 grand a month electric bill!
So in reality that ~6 years cable life is going to stretch out over a couple of decades as probably the high temperature is only for tens of minutes per day, not 24/7
Reply to Ring Final Circuit (RFC) versus Radial. Yes, again. in the Electrical Engineering Chat area at ElectriciansForums.net