Looking for some advice as to the art of the possible prior to making a numpty of myself in front of my electrician.
Current board is three phase which has been split so upstairs circuits on one, downstairs on another and outbuildings on the third ( house used to have all electric heating I think so it was probably an attempt to load balance).
I have two essential supplies one to the water pump ( on top of hill, no power=no water!) and the heating circulation pump which acts as a safety device to prevent solid fuel boiler boiling the heat store. This has a battery back up but would only last about 6 hours. Both these are on the same phase.
My question is can I safely supply one phase via a changeover switch from a 1ph generator and leave the other two phases connected to main supply? So I put a changeover switch on one of the tails only. What are earthing/neutral issues with this and what problems if supply was restored on two phases with generator still supplying the other? Is this even feasible?
If not or unsafe, wont embarrass myself by asking my local sparks!!
Current board is three phase which has been split so upstairs circuits on one, downstairs on another and outbuildings on the third ( house used to have all electric heating I think so it was probably an attempt to load balance).
I have two essential supplies one to the water pump ( on top of hill, no power=no water!) and the heating circulation pump which acts as a safety device to prevent solid fuel boiler boiling the heat store. This has a battery back up but would only last about 6 hours. Both these are on the same phase.
My question is can I safely supply one phase via a changeover switch from a 1ph generator and leave the other two phases connected to main supply? So I put a changeover switch on one of the tails only. What are earthing/neutral issues with this and what problems if supply was restored on two phases with generator still supplying the other? Is this even feasible?
If not or unsafe, wont embarrass myself by asking my local sparks!!