thanks for the reply. the company meter location is not important, it just represent the electricity IN (live and neutral) into the panelWhy is the utility company meter positioned where it is?
are you a spark?
thx for the reply, colors are not important, red is live, blue is neutralWhat country are you in? Strange (to us) colours.
thx for the reply.Please start at the beginning, what is it you are trying to achieve?
Have you read the manufactures instructions for the devices you ask about? Do you have any qualifications, as your first thread was posted in the DIY section?
It would probably help if you answer the earlier questions about what country you are in as well?
Doc H.
Back to the DIY section then . . .the typical home installation which normally consists of a "double pole mcb" followed by an "ELCB"
Keep up the humor Obviously I was referring to the part in the photo which is the subject of the question. OBVIOUSLY there are other components in a consumer unit but when electricity come out of the utility meter, in MOST BASIC SETUPS it goes to a double pole MCB and then to an ELCB and that's the part which I need to incorporate the SPD and RELAY. But apparently my question is not easy hence I have yet to receive a constructive reply. (If it was easy I would not have asked said question in the first place)Back to the DIY section then . . .
yes right, the double Pole MCB is actually just the main switch, in my country most people call it inaccurately double pole mcb due to its resemblance to the mcb's and i refereed it wrongly too - my bad!It's rare to find double Pole MCBs in the UK domestic installs
even rarer to find double Pole RCBOs.....except in my house and a very very few others
yes right, the double Pole MCB is actually just the main switch, in my country most people call it inaccurately double pole mcb due to its resemblance to the mcb's and i refereed it wrongly too - my bad!
thanks for the reply. you look very experienced on the topic in question (otherwise probably you wouldn't have just replied for the fun of it), are you able to advise if the updated diagram below is correct? (thanks a million )The "simple" difference you have to ask yourself is....
Can the "device" disconnect the supply automatically upon detection of either Overload or Leakage....?
..........................
While in the diagram i made it should perform well and it was done using schematics from each component , I was looking for some feedback with regards to the location of said components in case of a surge. Such as for example, should the elcb be before the relay or afterwards and so on.
Just for reference, the above will be in its own enclosure next to the utility meter, and it will lead to the actual consumer unit located in the building with the full blown consumer unit with another double pole mcb, an elcb and followed by the individual mcb's for each relevant circuit. (you know, the usual)
thanks again for the humor!
thanks for the reply. you look very experienced on the topic in question (otherwise probably you wouldn't have just replied for the fun of it), are you able to advise if the updated diagram below is correct? (thanks a million )
View attachment 10962
Do you understand the concept of how (RCD's/ELCB's) work?
And if you do, do you understand how they may typically operate if multiple RCD's are protecting the supply to the same bit of circuit?
If your proposed arrangement is supplying more than one final circuit I certainly wouldn't be having any single up-front RCD.
Just use RCBO's for each final circuit.
:coffee
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