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Baker1988

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Hi just wondered if any one could settle this disagreement me and another sparky I work with are having.

Basically do lighting circuits need rcd protection? The circuits I am on about are already existing (doing eicr?) and it is all surface mounted in pc trunking one of the circuits goes into a bathroom but the bathroom has supplementary bonding and also the main bond to gas and water is in place. It's a tn-s earth.

I basically say it doesn't need a rcbo (board is rcbos with 2 mcb for lighting) and he is saying it does.

Its work for a local council and have been told to rectify any c1 or c2 there and then but can leave c3s

I may be wrong and I'm happy to learn if I am.
 
This is always open to needless debate on an EICR, you are not there to decide if it needs additional rcd protection but to make a statement of fact it does not have this provision. Deciding on a Code you need to assess whether existing provisions which are or not in place make it safe for continued use.
 
Is that just on new installs as I would agree they need it but what if they havnt got it. What would you code it?
The fact is it does not have it and this is what you state, question is does it affect the safe continued use in its absence or are existing provisions adequate.
 
If it is your professional opinion that the design of the existing installation does not present a significant risk but has the capability to be improved then this would be a C3 on your report, because that is what you are reporting, your assessment of the risk.

With ADS and supplementary bonding in the bathroom the touch voltage in the case of a fault should not present a risk therefore it is not necessary to have 30mA RCD protection, however it it were in place this would be an extra layer of safety and would be in agreement with the current regulations.
 
An assessment can be made of the effectiveness of the supplementary bonding which I'm sure as part of the testing process you have done:)
Basically if the lighting circuit in the bathroom is protected by a 6 amp type b mcb then the formula
50/Ia is used
So 50/30= 1.667 ohms
So as long as your resistance of the pipework is below this figure the supplementary bonding satisfies the regulations
Also worth remembering that all circuits serving the location without rcd protection need to be supplementary bonded together to the extraneous parts
 
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