I want to extend the patio, and will be driving the earth rod further into the ground and covering next year some time, the patio is too high, over the damp coarse, it was a double garage but now a flat, and we hope in the future to fit a lift between main house and flat, so it can be used more.
The earth rod is because we have batteries, inverter, and solar panels which can supply freezers, and central heating should we loose the DNO supply, so that the neutral in a power cut is referenced to earth, the inverter auto connects neutral and earth when the DNO supply is lost.
However when the DNO supply is connected, it is connecting the DNO PEN to earth, and if there should be a broken PEN, then even with my isolator switched off, so no DNO supply into the house, there could be a fair current going through the earth electrode, and there will be a gradient of voltage as we move away from the earth rod.
In all my time in the UK only had first hand experience of a loss of PEN once, it was a radio hams home, and he had an earth mat for his transmitter bonded with 4 mm² to the TN-C-S earth of the house, he realised some thing was wrong, turned off his main isolator, but his earth cable became a line of copper globules where it had melted.
My earth rod is no where good enough to cause that sort of current to run, and loss of PEN is rare, but using a word search for earth electrode in BS7671:2008 found loads, but nothing about size of cover over an earth rod. I expected some thing like this
but got like this
but only a single depth of conduit box.
The installer showed me the loop impedance on his meter, less than 1Ω, clearly an error some where, a single earth rod would never be that low, but not got around yet to measuring myself, I suspect he removed the wrong wire from the earth block to test. He also removed the boiler from any RCD protection, which also seems wrong, I know it is a FCU not plug and socket, but would have expected it to be RCD protected, it was before they fitted the solar, it was fed from an RCBO.