Well you must like the look of green and yellow cable !Yes, anything which had the potential to accidentally live.
Well you must like the look of green and yellow cable !Yes, anything which had the potential to accidentally live.
I'll see if I can find a diagram.Because my question is, I’d like to know a scenario where touch voltage is going to exceed let’s say 50 V main bonding is in place and all circuits in the location have a CPC
Indeed - as I wrote.I was about to make the point that if the metal waste pipe and trap were indeed continuous into the ground they would be /should be main bonded .
ditto.So we are down to shock protection during a LE fault duration of typical 0.4s for final circuits.
I would imagine the traditional thinking is that any electric shock is likely to be more serious (higher current), hence more likely to prove fatal, when people are 'naked and wet'. With west skin, body resistance can be 1kΩ or lower, hence at 230V can result in a shock current of 230 mA or more, which might be fatal,even if a ("30mA") RCD limited to duration to a couple of dozen milliseconds.Thinking aloud, is there anything more dangerous during this period in a zone than in say a bedroom because we are talking 240V touch voltage here - maybe more exposed pipe work - but a radiator would have the same effect I’m sure in another room .
Without supplementary bonding, even though all CPCs are joined at the MET, inb the event of an L-E fault the potential of one of them (hence any associated exposed-c-ps) will rise to very much higher than MET potential, whereas the potential of COPCs/exposed-c-ps of other circuits or main-bonded extraneous CPs will remain at MET potential - hence a potentially dangerous potential difference.In any case what is the supp bonding achieving here that isn’t already achieved by all of the CPC’s being combined at the CU and all of the extraneous services being connected be main bonding connections?
As I've just written ....I’d still be interested to understand the object of it and the scenarios they were intending to mitigate because I can’t get my head around the usual “to prevent PD between extraneous conductive parts” whilst the zone occupant is performing some odd pose whilst wet and unrobed. I’ve always wondered how large this PD could possibly be if main bonding in place, and in all likelihood even if it isn’t ?
As I've recently written ...Couldn't find any suitable diagram so - is this any help? .... What will be the voltage between points A and B with and without the supplementary bonding.
Yes but you are ignoring the pipe and its associated CPC.Depends on the magnitude of the fault current and the resistance of the cpc between A and the MET and R1 ? (Assuming negligible resistance of the supp bond)
Yes, but I was asking Equitum for him to say; not because I didn't know.As I've recently written ...
Without SB, the pd between A & B would depend upon the circuit's cable (ratio of L & CPC CSAs) but, for example, with 2.5mm² T+E, it would be about 144 V.
With SB, the PD between A & B would be fairly close to zero - small deviations from zero being due to the 'voltage drop' in the (presumably short, and of reasonable CSA) SB conductor due to it carrying a portion of the fault current.
Ratio of CSA's of CPC and L conductor (of 2.5mm² T+E) is 1.5 : 2.5, hence ratio of R2 to R1 is 2:5 : 1.5.What’s your calculation to achieve 144V ?
Oh yes, sure you were my whole original post was around in a dwelling, the differences would be negligible due to relatively short lengths of cpc and parallel paths with the ECPs and main bonding for supplementary bonding to make a differenceYes, but I was asking Equitum for him to say; not because I didn't know.
Fair enough - that wasn't clear (at least, not to me!)Yes, but I was asking Equitum for him to say; not because I didn't know.
lolFair enough - that wasn't clear (at least, not to me!)
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