Never heard of tri-rated flexible cable. There are rubber cables available in that size and if it is a long run someone has made a serious error.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Discuss Using earth as neutral in the Talk Electrician area at ElectriciansForums.net
Don’t understand why there’s any debate?Now that we know its not actually tri rated cable yes, ladder or tray seems more likely.
There's an interesting debate to be had on whether it is ever allowed, for SWA or anything else.
It's called tri-flexNever heard of tri-rated flexible cable. There are rubber cables available in that size and if it is a long run someone has made a serious error.
It's called tri-flex
It's also mechanically strong.
I one time drove a genie MEWP over a live 50mm 5 core flex.
If the cable is installed in some kind of metallic containment then use the containment as the cpc, size permitting of course.We’ve pulled in a 185 cable just and realised that we need a neutral. It has 4 cores, brown, black, grey and earth. Can we use the earth as a neutral if we shrink wrap it with neutral sleeve and then run an earth separate? It’s a tri-rated cable, so no armoured to use as earth.
Don’t understand why there’s any debate?
521.5.1 Ferromagnetic enclosures: electromagnetic effects
The conductors of an AC circuit installed in a ferromagnetic enclosure shall be arranged so that all line conductors and the neutral conductor, if any, and the appropriate protective conductor are contained within the same enclosure.
Where such conductors enter a ferrous enclosure, they shall be arranged such that the conductors are only collectively surrounded by ferromagnetic material.
These requirements do not preclude the use of an additional protective conductor in parallel with the steel wire armouring of a cable where such is required to comply with the requirements of the appropriate regulations in Chapters 41 and 54. It is permitted for such an additional protective conductor to enter the ferrous enclosure individually.
Didn't take a fidge out of it.I bet it looked like a snake,run over,on a cattle grid....
Didn't take a fidge out of it.
It's extremely robust. You can hardly strip it with a Stanley knife let alone damage it.
There's actually wool between the inner cores and the outer sheath.
Yes. I can't see any Regs that preclude this.We’ve pulled in a 185 cable just and realised that we need a neutral. It has 4 cores, brown, black, grey and earth. Can we use the earth as a neutral if we shrink wrap it with neutral sleeve and then run an earth separate?
AgreeNever heard of tri-rated flexible cable. There are rubber cables available in that size and if it is a long run someone has made a serious error.
It’s ok to sleeve the CPC in a multi core cable, but not if it’s a single core cable.Worth a read, I think:
Using Green/Yellow not as CPC - https://www.electriciansforums.co.uk/threads/using-green-yellow-not-as-cpc.35860/
Strictly speaking it would seem that over-sleeving is okay, but personally I'm on the side of those that would never do it - mostly due to the element of unexpected surprise that somebody maintaining the installation in the future might be confronted with.
It’s ok to sleeve the CPC in a multi core cable, but not if it’s a single core cable.
Reply to Using earth as neutral in the Talk Electrician area at ElectriciansForums.net