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Msitekkie

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I would appreciate peoples thoughts on fixing this earthing setup to correctly separate PME & TT:

Setup: Workshop at the bottom of a long garden connected to supply via 3 core armoured cable. Earth rod fitted at workshop, but the earth has also been connected to the PME from the supply & the armouring is earthed throughout.
Just to complicate matters further, a No2 Pratley box (Metal) has been used to T off the armoured cable in a garage located between supply & workshop.

More detail: Both outbuildings have individual consumer units & have concrete floors & block walls. Floor in the garage tends to be damp. SWA is partly buried, partly clipped & connected to a consumer unit in the meter box with 40A RCD (not S type unfortunately, but that doesn't affect the earthing & DNO seem happy with CU in the meter box).

Questions/thoughts:
I am aware TT & PME should not be joined, so would begin by disconnecting the SWA earth core at the supply end. Probably also in the Pratley box on the supply side. Leaving the TT earthing connected between workshop & garage.
I am not so sure about the armouring... If it was just the workshop I would just isolate the armouring from the consumer unit there. Would you just do the same with the garage consumer unit and leave it at that?

Additional thoughts:
Would you expect the garage to need it's own earth rod?
Pratley have told me they can supply "non metallic glands" for their box so maybe for the garage consumer unit I could isolate the armouring where it comes out of the Pratley box rather than at the consumer unit end of that short leg (on the wall). Otherwise at the CU end like the workshop.

Summary: So hopefully I would end up with the circuits in both outbuildings TT earthed, but the armouring PME earthed (& isolated from TT) except the short leg on the wall from Pratley box to CU which would be TT earthed.
 
Although you say currently you have an earth rod connected to the PME earth at the workshop, this earth rod could be counted as an extraneous conductive part, if you were to leave it this way with that earth there would need to be a minimum of a 10mm conductor connecting that earth rod to the PME MET

This is also the case for any other extraneous conductive part in either of the buildings, like water pipes etc

It's (theoretically) possible that by applying the calculations for minimum supplementary bonding csa that if it comes back in small enough (min 4mm) that your SWA armoured might be up to the job, in which case just extend the PME. Have a read of GN8.
Sorry I don't understand how that would protect against a broken PEN conductor?
 
There is no bonding requirement. No water pipes or anything like that in the outbuildings.
That make TT easier then, H
But are we discussing main bonding or supplementary??
Wouldn't it be main bonding
[ElectriciansForums.net] Separating PME & TT earthing for outbuildings
 
Exposed conductive parts yes, extraneous conductive parts no, unless you include the earth rod itself in that category.
In its current configuration, the earth rod is classed as an extraneous conductive part as currently the PME earth is in use at the workshop.

However you want to isolate the PME earth and change to TT, in that case the earth rod will become the earth electrode for the workshop TT system.
 
In its current configuration, the earth rod is classed as an extraneous conductive part as currently the PME earth is in use at the workshop.

However you want to isolate the PME earth and change to TT, in that case the earth rod will become the earth electrode for the workshop TT system.
So coming back to my original posting, does anyone have any comments about the specifics of achieving this seperation, or does my proposed approach seem correct? Interestingly I think I have found some suitable "Tufflon" compression glands from Pratley to achieve the isolation rather than having to use a plastic box to terminate the SWA to.
 

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I'm very tired and obviously missing something obvious here, and fully prepared to look a right idiot!

As a matter of semantics wouldn't you normally apply the term PME to the DNO side of the supply? So essentially the OP has TNCS?

I believe the OP is saying that the TNCS is exported to a non-metalic building, and the only 'extraneous conductive part' is a backup earth rod, presumably installed as a belt and braces backup in case of broken upstream PEN conductor. I'm assuming this is run in insulated earth cable until the rod itself, so the only exposed point is the very top of the rod?

Extraneous conductive parts obviously need bonding to a fixed potential, and the earth rod is connected to real mass of earth one end and the exported earth the other end.
Supposing the earth rod was actually a metal water pipe that ran out underground and up to a tap. You'd bond it.
I'm not grasping the difference, or the actual issue in having a backup earth rod in an outbuilding which has an exported TNCS earthing conductor. What am I missing here please?
 
I'm very tired and obviously missing something obvious here, and fully prepared to look a right idiot!

As a matter of semantics wouldn't you normally apply the term PME to the DNO side of the supply? So essentially the OP has TNCS?

I believe the OP is saying that the TNCS is exported to a non-metalic building, and the only 'extraneous conductive part' is a backup earth rod, presumably installed as a belt and braces backup in case of broken upstream PEN conductor. I'm assuming this is run in insulated earth cable until the rod itself, so the only exposed point is the very top of the rod?

Extraneous conductive parts obviously need bonding to a fixed potential, and the earth rod is connected to real mass of earth one end and the exported earth the other end.
Supposing the earth rod was actually a metal water pipe that ran out underground and up to a tap. You'd bond it.
I'm not grasping the difference, or the actual issue in having a backup earth rod in an outbuilding which has an exported TNCS earthing conductor. What am I missing here please?
Hi Tim, maybe looking back at my original post would help - we got a bit off the point with discussing the earth rod itself.
When deciding to export the PME or not, the available guidance tends to talk about extraneous conductive parts such as water pipes & the associated bonding issues so people focus on that, hence I think some of the bonding discussion above.
The other issue that is often ignored (and which I am talking about here) is when you get a broken Neutral (PEN conductor) in the supply. In this scenario the earth becomes live along with any exposed conductive parts. Yikes! In the house this is less of an issue because of the reduced likelyhood of being in contact with earth (carpets wooden floors etc). A wooden outbuilding with plastic accessories is similar to the house.
To mitigate against the risk of electric shock where you have exposed conductive parts in an outbuilding (sometimes walls made of metal sheeting even) you use TT earthing in the outbuilding & isolate it from the PME. In this case a previous electrician has left the PME & TT interconnected and the scenario is further complicated by the SWA passing through and being T'd off in the 2nd outbuilding. It is also necessary to consider protection should someone say, put a pick-axe through the cable.
So the question is mostly about achieving this separation in the correct manner.
 
So coming back to my original posting, does anyone have any comments about the specifics of achieving this seperation, or does my proposed approach seem correct? Interestingly I think I have found some suitable "Tufflon" compression glands from Pratley to achieve the isolation rather than having to use a plastic box to terminate the SWA to.
I believe others have used a standard plastic stuffing gland to isolate the amour from SWA, I guess as long as it grips & supports the cable and you cannot access exposed conductive parts from each earthing system at the same time (411.3.1.2) then all is ok
 
I believe others have used a standard plastic stuffing gland to isolate the amour from SWA, I guess as long as it grips & supports the cable and you cannot access exposed conductive parts from each earthing system at the same time (411.3.1.2) then all is ok
Thanks Marcus, I have seen suggestions before of using a step-down adapter from 25mm to 20mm, but not that you could use an ordinary stuffing/compression gland to isolate the armouring when terminating to metal containment. Guess I should give that a try then, but would be interested to hear from someone who has actually used that approach.
 
Hi Tim, maybe looking back at my original post would help - we got a bit off the point with discussing the earth rod itself.
When deciding to export the PME or not, the available guidance tends to talk about extraneous conductive parts such as water pipes & the associated bonding issues so people focus on that, hence I think some of the bonding discussion above.
The other issue that is often ignored (and which I am talking about here) is when you get a broken Neutral (PEN conductor)
Thanks for responding. And sorry I misunderstood the question.
I understand the dangers of a broken PEN conductor but the current arrangement would seem to already make it safer, subject of course to the resistance of the rod.
I knew I'd seen this discussed in a video - I finally found the right one - 20 minutes 10 seconds in:
That example is at supply source, but the same would presumably apply in at outbuilding.

Converting the outbuilding to TT is of course still an option and you might prefer it.
 
I believe others have used a standard plastic stuffing gland to isolate the amour from SWA, I guess as long as it grips & supports the cable and you cannot access exposed conductive parts from each earthing system at the same time (411.3.1.2) then all is ok
Thanks Marcus. looks like my earlier reply to your message didn't survive, so let me try again. I was saying I have heard of people using 25mm to 20mm step down adapters to isolate, but hadn't come across this approach before & should give it a try.
I also mentioned I would be interested to hear from anyone who has tried this approach.
 
Thanks for responding. And sorry I misunderstood the question.
I understand the dangers of a broken PEN conductor but the current arrangement would seem to already make it safer, subject of course to the resistance of the rod.
I knew I'd seen this discussed in a video - I finally found the right one - 20 minutes 10 seconds in:
That example is at supply source, but the same would presumably apply in at outbuilding.

Converting the outbuilding to TT is of course still an option and you might prefer it.
In John's example there are no exposed conductive parts, so it's a different scenario & little risk involved - the foundation earthing mats he mentioned briefly, I understand may become a thing in the next version of the regs - necessary I gather for "Islanding" purposes if you want to take a solar installation off-grid when you have a power cut. I commented on that video asking John to demonstrate the SWA isolation in another viseo, as I haven't seen any of the usual YouTuber suspects do it, but JW hasn't responded (as yet anyway).
 
I saw that you state in an earlier post that you are trying to avoid a plastic adaptable box, though to be honest that's exactly how I've done this in the past.
In one case it was three core SWA so easy to simply terminate the cpc and joint L and N to a new 2 core SWA.
In the other case I actually used a box within a bigger box and the incoming and outgoing 2-core SWA cables were a good distance apart, and the double enclosure meant that even if the outer shroud came off the inbound PME earthed cable it wasn't accessible.
 

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