Any chance of a piccy of the SPD rating plate, when you say different ratings, ratings as in what, volts amps etc?So I was installing a new split load Hager DB (with the integral SPD) and noticed that the SPD cartridges connected across the neutral and line poles of the SPD were rated differently. Is there a reason for these different ratings?
Spud
Any chance of a piccy of the SPD rating plate, when you say different ratings, ratings as in what, volts amps etc?
Any chance of a piccy of the SPD rating plate, when you say different ratings, ratings as in what, volts amps etc?
The neutral being connected to earth, is more likely to suffer from surges caused by lightning strikes.
It came with the board but looks retrofitted right ?Have you retrofitted that or did it come with the board?
It was! The crimped 6mm tailing connecting the main switch to the SPD is HAGERS!I’m a bit surprised that the isolator was not already connected.
Is that the main switch?It was! The crimped 6mm tailing connecting the main switch to the SPD is HAGERS!
The DNO fuse is the only upstream OCPD, nothing within the board. I think the current ratings of the cartridges and base must take this into account and I guess the board has been tested and the 6mm tails are deemed as suitable for current carrying capacity for the nano seconds that the SPD is in closed circuit. These are all assumptions you understand!!Are the SPD’s fused or at least the line internally,or direct from the isolator where fault protection is then through the dno fuse?
Been thinking on this one. Presumably you mean its more likely to suffer than the line in a PME installation where the multiple earth's at the poles are more susceptible to indirect strikes? But at the SPD in the consumer unit of the TNCS installation the neutral and earth are at the same potential so how does the SPD dump voltage from the neutral to the earth if they're are essentially the same conductor at the same potential ?The neutral being connected to earth, is more likely to suffer from surges caused by lightning strikes.