S
Steve D
Hi All,
Over the last few years I've been harping on to my company bosses that we need to wise up with our safe isolation procedure.
The company I work for has approx 100 field service engineers, and in the last couple of weeks our training manager has agreed to purchase approved GS38 voltage indicators and proving units for each engineer.
This is instead of using multimeters to test for dead, as they are currently (although, to be honest, I'd be surprised if as much as half our engineers truly did test for dead before working anyway).
However, the proving unit that has been selected is the cheaper 240V type and not the 690V version.
Our engineers do work on 3ph equipment.
The training manager says that his intention is to test from each line to neutral and each line to earth, to check for dead, instead of also testing between lines.
Now, at college, it was always drummed in to us that safe isolation on a 3ph installation is a 10 point test as you MUST test between lines.
Is there a scenario that might arise where all L-N and L-E show dead but there is still a dangerous voltage between lines ?
I'm not really comfortable agreeing to it as is contradicts everything that I have been taught.
What are your thoughts about it ?
Cheers
Steve
Over the last few years I've been harping on to my company bosses that we need to wise up with our safe isolation procedure.
The company I work for has approx 100 field service engineers, and in the last couple of weeks our training manager has agreed to purchase approved GS38 voltage indicators and proving units for each engineer.
This is instead of using multimeters to test for dead, as they are currently (although, to be honest, I'd be surprised if as much as half our engineers truly did test for dead before working anyway).
However, the proving unit that has been selected is the cheaper 240V type and not the 690V version.
Our engineers do work on 3ph equipment.
The training manager says that his intention is to test from each line to neutral and each line to earth, to check for dead, instead of also testing between lines.
Now, at college, it was always drummed in to us that safe isolation on a 3ph installation is a 10 point test as you MUST test between lines.
Is there a scenario that might arise where all L-N and L-E show dead but there is still a dangerous voltage between lines ?
I'm not really comfortable agreeing to it as is contradicts everything that I have been taught.
What are your thoughts about it ?
Cheers
Steve