Yes, I will claim that. "protective conductor (PE)" is not the same as "circuit protective conductor (cpc)". There are two different entries in the definitions - or hadn't you noticed that ?
Yes, I have noticed that.
I have not noticed, I must admit, 543.7.1.203 using the term "protective conductor (PE)". Is this because I've missed something which is there, or because you are seeing things which are not?
But I will tell you what I have noticed, and that is written English, which therefore construes as written English.
I have also noticed ".. every circuit .. shall have a .. protective conductor ..". So that makes it a circuit protective conductor.
But surely, according to you we must read the regs AS WRITTEN - and teh regs do not say circuit protective conductor. So by using that when the regs actually say something different, you are interpreting the regs as saying something they do not ?
Also, for the purposes of HIE, they may well have deliberately used the different terminology. As I see it, the cpc is there for fault protection, the PE is there for protection against shock due to the leakage current. As it is, in some or many cases the same conductor (or set of conductors, joints etc) will act as both.
Yes, I get that you are still using your diversionary tactics.
So you think it is logical that "high integrity" should mean "more integrity" for one sort of circuit but "same integrity" for another.
Yes, and it is strange that you seem unable to grasp that concept. It means that - that the
END RESULT should be high integrity, not that any specific process must be followed to convert from one of several levels of integrity into one high level of integrity.
Taking the specific example, would you compare the PE redundancy of a radial where the end earth connection has been extended and taken back to the MET thus closing a ring, and that of an RFC (with one cpc) ?
Of course.
With the former you have done something to increase the integrity. In the latter you have not.
I'll give you the benefit of the doubt and allow that you misread the question.
Please compare the level of redundancy of the PE, not the process that arrived at the topology, but the level of redundancy as installed. In the case given, does the case of two radials with the PE ends linked together have higher redundancy, the same level of redundancy, or lower redundancy when compares with the PE of an RFC - assuming both are wired with the same techniques (ie using the separate earth terminals in accessories and so on).
Assuming both use the same termination methods - ie using separate terminals in both accessories and MET - is there any difference in either topology or redundancy between the resulting PE "rings" ?
No, there isn't. But in the former that topology represents increased integrity or redundancy compared to "normal", and in the latter it does not.
Ah, so you did read it then, and you agree that both provide the same high level of redundancy. Why does it matter that with one topology you started with no redundancy and so have to increase it, while with the other you started with almost the required level ?
You keep sounding like you think the process is more important that the end result.
In the former it makes a change which makes it reasonable for there to be the concept of "high integrity" as something distinct from "normal", in the latter it does not. But the concept of "high integrity" as something distinct from "normal" is applied by the Regulations to RFCs.
If you are right, and that actually there are no such requirements, do you have a logical, simple even, explanation of why they didn't just exempt RFCs in 543.7?
A standard RFC PE does not automatically, and in most cases as wired to "common practice" does not, meet the requirements for HI. It is normal, for example, to put both tails of the PE into the same terminal in the MET, and many people put both tails of the PE into the same earth terminal in the accessories - that does not meet the requirements for HI.
But an RFC starts off with higher integrity than a radial wired using the same practices.
543.7.2 seems (on it's own) to be saying that if you wire an RFC with some minor changes in practice - ie using separate terminals for the two ends at each point - then it does qualify as HI.
Also consider the specific statement that (with some conditions relating to circuit protection) that where two radial circuits are present, it is acceptable to link the earth terminations of the end points together so that the CP forms a ring. That is most definitely not "doubling up" the number of CPCs
Indeed it is not. It is changing the topology to increase the redundancy of connections. If the circuit started out needing that level of redundancy then when you need to increase it you need to change the topology. The way which the regulations say that shall be done is to double up the number of cpcs.
It really does. That's what "two individual" means - two is double the number one.
Hmm, so adding (say) 6" of earth wire to a large installation is "doubling"
So we have two radials, lets assume wired in T&E, and by choice or design we arrange for the last devices to be in close proximity so we can easily just drop a bit of earth wire between them.
Do we now agree that both radials (subject to separate terminations etc) now meet the requirements for HI earthing ? And that this has a single ring of protective conductors from the MET, via all the accessories, and back to the MET ?
I agree that it meets the requirements for HI earthing for radials, not rings.
And leaving aside for a minute the regs, do you see a logical reason why that topology is HI for the two radials, but ceases to be HI if you add L&N links and make it an RFC ? What is the change in integrity of the PE that is caused by the adding of the L&N links ?