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Discuss Wylex 3rd Amendment CU - TT recommendation in the Electrical Wiring, Theories and Regulations area at ElectriciansForums.net
I know this is a bit old now, but been to look at a job today which needs a cu change and is TT, so been doing some looking at this. Noticed in the OSG, figure 3.6.3 page 33 that it says for the enclosure 'for TT installation insulated enclosure or further mechanical protection to meter tails'
There you have it OSG says insulated enclosure is fine...
Don't think so Paul. I haven't got a copy of the yellow OSG yet, but Richard posted a copy of pages 32-35 at #14. No mention of insulated enclosure there, as far as I can see. I've emailed my scheme on this, and they referred me to those pages. Also watched a 'webinair' by NIC/ELECSA, and that nice young Darren Stantinforth said for TT, using double insulated tails and protect them, when entering the metal enclosure, with a dedicated plastic gland (such as Wiska sprint tail kit, or the Wylex gland), would be suitable for a TT supply. Hager have also introduced a cable clamp for the tails. Are you in a scheme? If so ask them. In the past the, we were always told to use insulated for TT, now I don't think they have properly thought this through. Even the new OSG say's the chance of internal cable links/bus bars touching the metal enclosure are 'minimal', so still possible. You could consider a time delay RCD as main switch?I know this is a bit old now, but been to look at a job today which needs a cu change and is TT, so been doing some looking at this. Noticed in the OSG, figure 3.6.3 page 33 that it says for the enclosure 'for TT installation insulated enclosure or further mechanical protection to meter tails'
There you have it OSG says insulated enclosure is fine...
Sorry for late reply, I was thinking about this recently. The wording of 421.1.201 is "Within domestic (household) premises, consumer units and similar switchgear assemblies...".
I think you can make a strong case that a standalone RCD is not a "similar switchgear assembly". It is not an OPD and it is not associated with a reduction in current carrying capacity of cables. It performs a totally different function to a CU.
A switchfuse or isolator plus OPD is effectively a one-way CU so does need to be non-combustible.
If you take this new reg as banning RCDs in plastic enclosures, then it also bans Wylex REC series isolators (and the Hager equivalent) where these are owned by the consumer.
That's what I've been told by Elecsa (think it was them) regarding the aforementioned plastic isolators not forming part of the 'domestic' installation. Doesn't make sense though, when sometimes these isolators are in the same location as the CU. Perhaps the DNO's can be more trusted than your domestic electrician
Reply to Wylex 3rd Amendment CU - TT recommendation in the Electrical Wiring, Theories and Regulations area at ElectriciansForums.net