Hi All,Going to well and trully stick my newbie neck out here, so all feel free to shoot me down!!!!
Touch voltage....Hmmm, well for a start off, bonding and R2 has nothing at all to do with touch voltage as far as i can see, unless of course you are trying i imagine, to calculate the voltage that may arise under fault conditions between exposed conductive parts and extraneous ones....
I hope your joking lol
Here though, I presume that here we are on about the touch voltage referenced to true earth, that which you will feel if you touch an exposed part during a fault, whilst standing on say, a damp concrete floor.
No, im referring to effective touch voltage as per IEC 6**5*-826
So, as for the other answers, everyone is nearly right!!!!
You think?
Touch voltage is indeed heavily influenced by Zs, as during a fault, it is Zs that determines the fault current that flows.
You need to be far more specific than that
So, firstly; We have a fault current that is purely determined by the Zs of the circuit concerned. All agreed on that one???
Agreed
Next, so, we have a [usually] large fault current flowing round our "earth loop"
Agreed
Now, you touch an exposed part during a fault, and what determines the voltage that will be applied to you???
Well are we assuming an equipotential Zone here?
One thing, and one thing only; as Sidewinder says, the impedance of the "earth" side of the "earth loop"
The voltage we would feel, would be the product of the total fault current flowing x the impedance of the "earth side" of the earth loop, measured from the point of the fault, back to the star point.
In other words, if the "earth side" of the loop were to be likened to a giant, [but hopefully low impedance] resistor, what we would have the dubious pleasure of feeling, would in effect, be the voltage appearing across this "resistor" when it is carrying whatever the total fault current may be...
Got my tin hat ready!!!!!!
I hope it's ready lol
john....