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Apologies if I'm repeating stuff that's been covered, I did have a look and couldn't find clear answers, especially as there is a water supply involved.
I want to replace the existing wiring in an outside shed with a dedicated feed from the house CU. Currently sockets and lighting in the shed are run from a 13 amp fused spur from the ground floor ring in the house, but this wont have the capacity to run the kit I want to install for a micro-brewery - Brew kettle, water heater, chiller etc that will need around 28 Amps between them at full chat. It's all standard 240v single phase stuff. No 3 phase commercial kit.
Having done some reading I have an idea of what needs doing but wanted a sanity check on the approach and to get some advice on the grounding requirements as there is a water supply in the shed, i.e. extraneous conductive parts if I have the terminology right. The shed is about 25 meters from the house CU. The water supply is fed from the main household supply (feeds taken from the hot and cold water pipes under the kitchen sink) which already has earth bonding on it.
The plan is to do most of the heavy lifting myself and get a local electrician to make the final live connection and inspect / certify afterwards.
Current thinking is to run a 10mm Twin and Earth SWA from a 40 Amp MCB in the house CU, I have an RCD protected spare way in the CU that can be used. Terminate this in a 2 way garage CU in the shed, with RCD, a 6 Amp MCB for the lights and a 32 Amp MCB for the sockets to feed the brew kit.
SWA will be cleated to the outside wall for most of the run and to timber joists for a section where it goes under some decking.
I'll use weatherproof junction boxes with appropriate glands for the SWA on the outside of the house and shed outbound and inbound respectively.
If this makes sense my main question is about the earthing requirements. Can I rely on the earth in the house CU or do I need additional bonding in the shed to the water pipes, or a separate earth spike?
I've tried to get my head around the IET regs but I'm struggling to make sense of it. I've also read https://electrical.theiet.org/media...tdoors-a-supply-to-a-detached-outbuilding.pdf but still not clear on what's needed.
I want to replace the existing wiring in an outside shed with a dedicated feed from the house CU. Currently sockets and lighting in the shed are run from a 13 amp fused spur from the ground floor ring in the house, but this wont have the capacity to run the kit I want to install for a micro-brewery - Brew kettle, water heater, chiller etc that will need around 28 Amps between them at full chat. It's all standard 240v single phase stuff. No 3 phase commercial kit.
Having done some reading I have an idea of what needs doing but wanted a sanity check on the approach and to get some advice on the grounding requirements as there is a water supply in the shed, i.e. extraneous conductive parts if I have the terminology right. The shed is about 25 meters from the house CU. The water supply is fed from the main household supply (feeds taken from the hot and cold water pipes under the kitchen sink) which already has earth bonding on it.
The plan is to do most of the heavy lifting myself and get a local electrician to make the final live connection and inspect / certify afterwards.
Current thinking is to run a 10mm Twin and Earth SWA from a 40 Amp MCB in the house CU, I have an RCD protected spare way in the CU that can be used. Terminate this in a 2 way garage CU in the shed, with RCD, a 6 Amp MCB for the lights and a 32 Amp MCB for the sockets to feed the brew kit.
SWA will be cleated to the outside wall for most of the run and to timber joists for a section where it goes under some decking.
I'll use weatherproof junction boxes with appropriate glands for the SWA on the outside of the house and shed outbound and inbound respectively.
If this makes sense my main question is about the earthing requirements. Can I rely on the earth in the house CU or do I need additional bonding in the shed to the water pipes, or a separate earth spike?
I've tried to get my head around the IET regs but I'm struggling to make sense of it. I've also read https://electrical.theiet.org/media...tdoors-a-supply-to-a-detached-outbuilding.pdf but still not clear on what's needed.
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