Hi Marcus
Yes I have a rcd on the hot tub and also the socket has an rcd built in ,
Can I not use the armor of the swa cable as an earth or do I need to add a separate ground rod , if so where do I stop the earth from main supply
Hi Shaun
You need to obtain if your house is TN-S, TN-C-S or TT earthing arrangement. A way to check is to look at where you supply cable comes into your house just before the electric meter where the main fuse is (service head):
TT: if you have an earth rod at your house and the earth from that rod goes into your consumer unit, and all you have coming in from the grid is L and N
TN-S: if your earth is connected to the incoming supply cable via an earth that looks to come out of the cable before the main fuse and is the sheath of that cable
TN-C-S: if you earth is connected to the incoming supply service head next the the N like this picture (alot of times there will be a sticker saying PME/Protective multiple earth also)
This is a guide and to really be sure you should test it or get an electrician to
Now if it is TN-C-S like the last one this is where the problem can be, due to a broken PEN conductor on the supply
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JRHyqouJPzE
Here might be another option:
I have looked on google images for the lazy spa hot tub and it looks as if the electrical unit at the side of the hot tub is made of plastic (likewise so is the tub) this could mean that it is double insulated / class 2 to check this look for a symbol on it like this
If this is the case and this symbol is on it then the risks of a broken N on TN-C-S has gone away, however the fact that there would still be a 13A socket down the garden means that someone could plug something else into it and that thing could be a class 1 item and the risk has returned, so in this case, if that outlet is only every to be used for the hot tub you could change the hot tub 13a plug & 13a socket outlet for another connecter to avoid any other equipment being used by that outlet (I would suggest a ture1 connector (
https://www.neutrik.com/en/neutrik/products/powercon/powercon-true1/powercon-true1-cable-connectors ) we use them all the time in my industry and they are solid and IP rated to be outside) (I wouldn't recommend a 16a ceeform connector as this still looks like a standard outlet and is not obviously for one use)
Yes very important to have RCD protection not just for the hot tub but also for the cable, it seems as if you have that already, and yes you can use the amour of the SWA cable for your earth conductor
So in summary this is what I would do:
- If I had TN-S supply: I would put an IP rated socket at the end of the garden using the amour as the earth and have it all protected by an RCD
- If I had TT supply: I would put an IP rated socket at the end of the garden using the amour as the earth and have it all protected by an RCD and add an additional earth rod at the garden socket outlet
- If I had TN-C-S supply & I only wanted to use that outlet for the hot tub: I would put a true1 outlet (F) at the end of the garden using the amour as the earth and have it all protected by an RCD and then change the 13A plug on the hot tub for a true1 male connector (and label the outlet as for class 2 items only)
- If I had TN-C-S supply & I wanted to use the garden outlet for alot of different things: I would put an IP rated socket at the end of the garden and make it its own TT island. I would connect the SWA amour to the house earth but then would isolate that earth from the 13a outlet (using a plastic junction box) then the 13a outlet earth would connect straight to a local earth rod and this must all be protected by an RCD
Please note if you are installing earth rod they need to be tested, you need a multi-function tester to test the earth rod resistance, your earth loop impedance. And if you were using TT then you RCD is critical so you would also want to check RCD disconnection times.
Sorry that's a bit long, hope this helps
Thanks Marcus