On another thread there was chat about the N-E voltage to be expected, so I decided to measure my flat out of curiosity as it appears to be TN-S.
A brief history - my flat is a Victorian built 4+4 arrangement and when I moved in many years ago each flat was fed by MICC cables. Something like a decade or so ago the DNO replaced all of that and installed a new panel in the communal area with each flat's cut-out replaced and fed by split concentric cables. So from a casual inspection of each flat you have a red link (no fuse in cut-out) and they appear to be TN-S supplies as earth is separated.
What I found from measurements on L-N on an unloaded spur circuit at the 1.6A of general background stuff on, and at 11.6A if I put on the oven as a test, was a neutral impedance of around 22mR and almost zero residual voltage (i.e. if I remove the current my own flat is taking I get around 3mV residual, around measurement error) so it clearly is TN-S-C at the common distribution board downstairs. (Yes, it could be very good balance out to the street, etc, but seems unlikely as it hardly changes going in to tea time and cookers, etc, going on).
So clearly they are not TN-S from this! Now in my case the extraneous bonding (gas and lead water pipe) is 16mm so well within rating, as as I am a few floors up I don't have any reason to fear PME fault, except over-voltage from phase imbalance trashing stuff.
So the question (if you can call it that) is why make the flats look TN-S by supplying separated earths, if you are actually PME in the local distribution system?
A brief history - my flat is a Victorian built 4+4 arrangement and when I moved in many years ago each flat was fed by MICC cables. Something like a decade or so ago the DNO replaced all of that and installed a new panel in the communal area with each flat's cut-out replaced and fed by split concentric cables. So from a casual inspection of each flat you have a red link (no fuse in cut-out) and they appear to be TN-S supplies as earth is separated.
What I found from measurements on L-N on an unloaded spur circuit at the 1.6A of general background stuff on, and at 11.6A if I put on the oven as a test, was a neutral impedance of around 22mR and almost zero residual voltage (i.e. if I remove the current my own flat is taking I get around 3mV residual, around measurement error) so it clearly is TN-S-C at the common distribution board downstairs. (Yes, it could be very good balance out to the street, etc, but seems unlikely as it hardly changes going in to tea time and cookers, etc, going on).
So clearly they are not TN-S from this! Now in my case the extraneous bonding (gas and lead water pipe) is 16mm so well within rating, as as I am a few floors up I don't have any reason to fear PME fault, except over-voltage from phase imbalance trashing stuff.
So the question (if you can call it that) is why make the flats look TN-S by supplying separated earths, if you are actually PME in the local distribution system?