No test required by NEC to proof the single rod meets this 25 ohm requirement as I'm sure you'll agree
Maybe not set out explicitly, but if you
don't test it, how can you be sure that it meets the 25-ohm requirement?
We do use GFCI outlet(sockets) and breakers. What you call RCD in the UK
Equivalent in principle of operation, although the RCD's employed in British homes these days most often have a sensitivity of 30mA whereas the North American GFCI used in homes is typically 5mA.
Can you clarify that we are actually using TN-CS system here in the U.S.
Yes, the standard American arrangement would be classified as TN-C-S.
First letter:
T = Supply neutral is connected to earth/ground at source (
terre).
Second letter:
N = Installation's protective earthing system is connected to the supply neutral.
T = Installation is earthed solely by a local earth electrode.
Subsequent letters, if present:
C = Protective earth path is combined with the neutral throughout.
S = Protective earth path is entirely separate.
C-S = Path is combined with the neutral some of the way, separate for the rest.
The problem that I see is this - in the UK if I'm correct they use L1+ separate neutral & separate earth wire all the way to xtrm and drive a rod at both locations . or do they piggy back the earth wire onto the neutral for the ride back to the xtrm?
There are several different arrangements found in Britain.
TN-S is as you describe, with separate neutral and earth all the way back to the transformer. It can be found in rural and semi-rural areas on overhead lines, but is most common in older urban areas where the supply is by way of underground lead-sheathed cables, the lead armor being used as the protective earth/ground. There is no requirement to have additional earth electrodes at each house, although there is nothing to prevent it either, and naturally there are bound to be effective earth electrodes by way of bonded water piping etc.
TN-C-S is essentially the same as the American system, with no separate earth conductor and each house grounded to the incoming neutral. In the U.K. this bond is made at the service cutout ahead of the meter, never at the neutral busbar of the main distribution panel as is common in North America. The other major difference is that in the U.K. there is no requirement to have a local earth electrode at each house, although there is nothing to prevent one being installed if desired. Most commonly these days, the supply arrangement uses a concentric cable where the outer is the neutral.
TT is where the house relies solely upon a local earth rod and there is no direct connection between the installation's protective earthing system and any incoming conductor from the supply. This is where the loop impedance will be very much higher due to the fact that there is no solid metallic path back to the transformer.
Note that it's not unusual to find a mixture of arrangements even among homes all in one street, e.g. some houses might be wired for TN-C-S whereas others on the same supply cable in the street are arranged as TT.
Although every house in the U.S. is required to have a local earth electrode, is it
not a TT arrangement because the installation's protective grounding system is connected directly to the incoming neutral and thus the local rod is not providing the sole fault-current path. The fault path is via separate grounding conductors within the home (the older 3-wire range & dryer arrangements excepted) then combined with the neutral from the main panel back to the transformer, hence TN-C-S.
We don't install the ground wire needed(earth conductor ) all the way back to the xtrm to preform Ze test this is the problem not the size of the conductors
You don't need a separate earth/ground conductor for the test though. It's still performed in the U.K. where TN-S is not found.
I'm not sure exactly but some how I alway thought it was just 90 degrees?? Anyone know for sure?
Relative to the neutral, the waveforms on each of the two "hot" conductors are 180 degrees out of phase. The transformer secondary is just a single winding with a center tap which is grounded and run to the house as the neutral (or two single windings connected in series to form the equivalent).