I wouldn't have thought it'll cause any problems at all. Most T&E is stamped to 500V, and IR testing is carried out to twice the circuit rating, so 1KV on T&E ought to be fine.
Always worth a try, I guess - but I suspect that when faults are not seen at 500V, by far the commonest situation (as with Martin) will be intermittency, rather than very marginal deterioration of insulating properties - i.e. when it doesn't show at 500V, it probably won't show at 1000V either. Indeed, if IR is showing hundreds of MΩ at 500V, it's unlikely that (at that moment) any fault would have an effect at 230V.Sounds like a way of maybe cajouling those extra-weird faults into action which may save a lot of time.I personally would have zapped 1000 volt through it to make sure before dismissing a circuit as clear.
I'm sure 1000v is fine. IIRC, the dielectric strength of PVC is something around 22 kV/mm. I've just measured some 2.5 mm² T&E, and it seems that the insulation thickness is a bit under 0.7mm - hence, if intact, it should be able to stand around 15kV before breaking down.But elevated votage testing of insulation can lead to the deterioration of the insulation if you're approaching its limits. Anybody know what kind of limits T&E has? And would 1kV testing present a problem to it?
Also don't forget that IR testers bang DC down the cable, and 1000V is therefore equivalent to only 707V AC.I wouldn't have thought it'll cause any problems at all. Most T&E is stamped to 500V, and IR testing is carried out to twice the circuit rating, so 1KV on T&E ought to be fine.
[hater-of-lies-and-censorship]It might be worth editing out any testing procedures not suited for DIYers as this post is bound to come up on searches
I think he may be using the word "plumber" as a technical term, only understood by electrical-savvy people (and not 'the ignorant') and not necessarily having the same meaning as it would in everyday English .all plumbers?
the dielectric strength of PVC is something around 22 kV/mm. I've just measured some 2.5 mm² T&E, and it seems that the insulation thickness is a bit under 0.7mm - hence, if intact, it should be able to stand around 15kV before breaking down.
Kind Regards, John
If it's just PVC insulation, rather than specifically T&E, which iinterests you, you can look at thinner insulation, and hence need fewer volts. For example, Cat5e conductors have an average insulation thickness of 0.21 mm, which, per the above, therefore ought to break down at around 4.6 kV if the insulation were in intimate contact with a bare conductor - can you find that many (controllable) volts? Although 'rated' at 30V, Cat5e certainly IRs fine at 1000V (at least, it always has for me!At the moment, sadly, the current test gear inventory prevents me from putting that to the test and providing you with a figure. The only source I have capable of those kinds of voltages isn't very controllable. Should that change you'll be the first to know.the dielectric strength of PVC is something around 22 kV/mm. I've just measured some 2.5 mm² T&E, and it seems that the insulation thickness is a bit under 0.7mm - hence, if intact, it should be able to stand around 15kV before breaking down.
[I presume the red bit should read something like "...more than 1000 times..."]Consider this - With a leak of current on one circuit from N to say the CPC, the load current on all circuits will contribute to this, as the neutral busbar is common to everything. This leads to a situation where say 30A of load current in the neutral may then divide, and in an unloaded RCBO protected circuit (ie ANY neutral current in the RCBO heads towards tripping it as line current is zero) with a N-E or N-GND fault it only needs a small portion of the 30A to trip. So if we need 30mA tops to trip it, the ratio of 30A needed is at most 30A/30mA so 1000:1 and that, at a guess, would be the ratio of impedances at the divide point needed with a N-E fault in place. Okay on PME the two are connected locally but it may still be possible that enough current goes through the RCBO to do the job. If the impedance of the path through the RCBO is not at least 1000 times less than the impendance of the path straight to where the CPC joins the neutral then would it do it?
If it's just PVC insulation, rather than specifically T&E, which iinterests you, you can look at thinner insulation, and hence need fewer volts. For example, Cat5e conductors have an average insulation thickness of 0.21 mm, which, per the above, therefore ought to break down at around 4.6 kV if the insulation were in intimate contact with a bare conductor - can you find that many (controllable) volts? Although 'rated' at 30V, Cat5e certainly IRs fine at 1000V (at least, it always has for me!
Kind Regards, John
Sorry about that!That's terribly practical John.
And it skips past one big reason for doing it - to see a piece of T&E lose it in style and grabbing a picture of it.
I obviously wouldn't be talking about these things if it didn't sound as if you knew what you were doing, since we're straying way above LV voltages.Seriously though, the reason for doing it was just out of interest. What I really need is a step up transformer that's ideally about 1kv to 1.5kv out. Whether or not its 50Hz mains in is another matter. A mains one would easily plug into the variac but we don't need the power. The high voltage diodes and caps to scale the voltage up further aren't a problem. The test gear to measure the voltage isn't a problem either. A thoughts? Only has to be a tiddler.
12V transformer reversed would be a starting point - gets you the volts bit.can you find that many (controllable) volts?
Sounds like an ideal project for Photonicinduction - maybe he could be tempted...That's terribly practical John.
And it skips past one big reason for doing it - to see a piece of T&E lose it in style and grabbing a picture of it.
Indeed, and one could even put reversed transformers in 'series' if one had to. However, as I said, the problem is likley to be that the secondary winding in one's arrangement (the winding intended as the primary) would quite probably not be well enough insulated to cope with the multiple kV we are talking about.12V transformer reversed would be a starting point - gets you the volts bit.
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