I'm not incompetent!
Did I name anybody
I'm not incompetent!
I guess I'll just have to get an electrician in - I'm just nervous about what @ericmark said about DNO's required checks:
So I fear I might pay someone £120 p/h, not agreeing to a fixed price/time, and then them telling me either they can't do the tests required (as @ericmark says), or that they do do the tests and it's a high Ze but still under 0.8Ω (as @JohnW2 said). And then I've spent hundreds and still no closer to just replacing a hob. :sigh:
What area are you?(this is Zone 4 London).
Finchley CentralWhat area are you?
One poster was suggesting it was about the right to access a sealed fuse rather than about competence. I’m just a layman trying to figure out who’s right, hoping that will help me establish which electrician to part my cash with.If they say they can’t do the tests, then don’t let them in your home OR pay them
This is extremely basic stuff
One poster was suggesting it was about the right to access a sealed fuse rather than about competence. I’m just a layman trying to figure out who’s right, hoping that will help me establish which electrician to part my cash with.
Because UKPN said it was one of things Marcos had to tell them before they would attend.Access to the sealed fuse is completely irrelevant and I’m not even sure why it’s mentioned
Because UKPN said it was one of things Marcos had to tell them before they would attend.
Keep up.
It's inaccurate to state that it's the maximum permissible - generally a declared maximum might be more accurate.That connection to the PILC incoming cable looks like it's via an earth clamp, which is a no-no.
Best replaced with a constant force spring which is a coiled strap which is wrapped around the lead sheath of the incoming cable. Only the DNO can work on the incoming supply.
The maximum allowable Ze for TN-S is 0.8 ohms, but hopefully the DNO will get a much lower Ze, allowing you to get a Zs comfortably within spec at the end of the hob circuit. Thought a 40A breaker max Zs was 0.92 ohms? Maybe my rusty brain misremembers?
That is for a type B. If it's a C the maximum Zs will be lower still.
Eh? - what are you 'strongly disagreeing' with'?I have to say, in the strongest possible terms, that I strongly disagree with you. I have been called to countless TN-S and TN-C-S supplies where the Ze has been outside the spec, often wildly.
I would have thought it was obvious that this was what I was disagreeing with this, judging by my comments:It seems fairly unlikely that the DNO-supplied earth is significantly 'high resistance'.
I have to say, in the strongest possible terms, that I strongly disagree with you. I have been called to countless TN-S and TN-C-S supplies where the Ze has been outside the spec, often wildly.
Two of the most memorable were a TN-C-S supply where the reading (if I got one) was 1000+ ohms. There was a bad connection in the cutout.
The other was a TN-S supply where the lead sheath had broken down under the ground and the DNO had to lay a new cable and connect to a sound piece of PILC cable under the pavement.
In this case it looks like a TN-S supply with what looks like an earthing clamp providing the connection to the incoming cable.
It is quite possible that dodgy looking clamp is not doing a good job, hence the raised loop impedance.
The majority of my out of spec Ze readings have been down to such a dodgy connection.
Let's face it, they weren't designed to do that job.
Yes, that seemed obvious, but I had to wonder because I couldn't (and still can't) really understand what you were/are so strongly disagreeing with, and you now even call my statement 'ridiculous'.I am strongly disagreeing with your ridiculous assertion that
I would have thought it was obvious that this was what I was disagreeing with this, judging by my comments:It seems fairly unlikely that the DNO-supplied earth is significantly 'high resistance'.
I'm sure your brain is fine - if anyone's brain is 'wrong-sided',it's probably mine I personally regard you as one of the more 'level-minded' people here!I'm not sure if I am "left-brained" (as Mrs S calls me - I am left-handed and she right and she says I reason differently to her), but quite simply I do not agree about your statement.
Ah, maybe I've twigged the problem!I am strongly disagreeing with you that it is unlikely that the DNO earth will have a significantly high resistance. Ridiculous may have been a little harsh, but I thought you were almost dismissing the possibility. In my experience, I have regularly found DNO earth connections with varying degrees of high resistance.
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