Oh you can all scoff , theres a lot to be said for poking with a stick , banging on the top or Meggering sensitive electronics @ 500V . ( Visualise a Tongue in cheek Emogi here)
Funny I was visualising the Megger going across your tongue and your cheek, now that would have been funny granted a bit nippy, but then I reread.Oh you can all scoff , theres a lot to be said for poking with a stick , banging on the top or Meggering sensitive electronics @ 500V . ( Visualise a Tongue in cheek Emogi here)
35mm! I'd be looking at that again if I were you, a normal street lighting column, as found alongside any road just has a short length of cable feeding it that is usually jointed into the cable feeding the houses along the road, round here I think they use split concentric, there's usually an earth strap from the isolator to the door and that I believe is a lump of 10mm G/Y. The fact that you are bolting the columns to a concrete pad rather than burying them will still have some effect on the loop values, it should lower them. Any brick/stone/concrete material is conductive to a greater or lesser extent, look at a house, now the metal back boxes are fixed to the brick walls, which always have some moisture in them, the back boxes are connected to the circuit earth either by a fly lead or by the screw fixing the accessory to the box. If you measure the value of loop at the CU with the main earth in place and also the bonds to gas and water, but with any other earths disconnected from the earth bar, you will get a reading, now, if you reinstate the other earths and measure again, you will find the reading drops, because of the parallel path through the brickwork. This is why you cannot simply put a clamp meter around the earth cables when you are trying to locate earth leakage on a circuit.Hi thanks for all replies , on closer inspection I've discovered one of the supply's for a number of lights is actually a P M E , as I understand it that takes me back to table 54.8 . The nutral supply cable to this building is 150 mm so that means 35 mm Earth cable ???
thats how I read it anyway , obviously this is not practical or cost effective , so I'm now thinking of going the TT route , any thoughts advise greatly appreciated
So just to translate, if your feeder pillar is distributing to multipe points, it must be a TN-S supply not TN-C-S?If you look at the latest version of the IET “Guide to electricl street furniture” in para 2.5.2, that it is perfectly acceptable for a DNO TN-C-S supply to feed a single column, or feeder pillar.
If the feeder pillar then has distribution from it, this must be TN-S, but, additional means of earthing are not needed , over and above a means at at the feeder pillar with a recommendation only to add another means of earthing at the ultimate or penultimate column in the radial circuit.
You can download the IET guide free from their website after filling in a form.
Outgoing to the columns must be TN-S it is part of the consumer installation where it is not allowed under ESQCR to share an N & E conductor.
The supply to the feeder pillar can be TN-C-S or TNS.
It's just a description of the supplies to the columns, they have to be TN-S, taking the feeder pillar as the source of supply.?
you cant make TNCS into TNS. the outgoing cable would have a seperate N&E regardless of earthing type
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