Currently reading:
TNCS - USING NEUTRAL AS EARTH IN BOARD

Discuss TNCS - USING NEUTRAL AS EARTH IN BOARD in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

Reaction score
34
Im travelling abroad to a country that has no earthing arrangement and my friend would like me to do a bit of work on his house. My question is Whether or not i could create a link between the Neutral and Earth bar to create a tncs system.

I know it sounds strange but i have just been thinking for the past couple of days how they do it here in the uk. They do the same thing for tncs systems a link between neutral and earth.
Could someone shine some light on the subject as to why it cannot be done and how it can be done here then?

P.s i know a earth rod can be hit into the ground but want to explore all options.

Thanks
 
I know nothing of other countries,but here the star point of the supply transformer is connected to earth and spiked along its run to keep it at or close to earth potential
Probably,the star point is earthed
If the supply then comes direct without the neutral and earth being spiked,its then jointed at the load end,the property earth and the true earth may be at very different potentials

Just seen its Libya, Do they still have properties standing in that sorry land ?
 
I know nothing of other countries,but here the star point of the supply transformer is connected to earth and spiked along its run to keep it at or close to earth potential
Probably,the star point is earthed
If the supply then comes direct without the neutral and earth being spiked,its then jointed at the load end,the property earth and the true earth may be at very different potentials

Just seen its Libya, Do they still have properties standing in that sorry land ?

Thanks for answering the queston, many still happilly standing
 
I would be very cautious about creating your own TN-C-S system because as Des says over here it has to confirm with specific requirements to keep the PEN at a reasonable resistance to true earth. Not knowing the setup in Libya you would be taking a huge risk doing this particularly with the hazards known with regards to a lost neutral which happens here and who knows the system reliability there.
 
I would be very cautious about creating your own TN-C-S system because as Des says over here it has to confirm with specific requirements to keep the PEN at a reasonable resistance to true earth. Not knowing the setup in Libya you would be taking a huge risk doing this particularly with the hazards known with regards to a lost neutral which happens here and who knows the system reliability there.

You see this is where i cant get me head round it. Because in the uk they have tncs which is just a link , why can it not be done in every uk home. It also has the same risks as anywhere in the world for example loss of neutral.
 
Where angels fear to tread ... I'd test it but probably go with RCD and TT at the home end. Making the outside of your coffee machine the same potential as the neutral in an unregulated environment is asking for a zap, IMHO.
 
UK currently not war torn and so we can rely upon the earth provided by the Distribution Network Operator. If DNO does not provide one, then TT and RCD is the go :)

Just to add a plug - it's only reliable because of the strict application of standards by hard working expert engineers keeping the UK distribution network in top shape. Sounds a bit corny but it is true, again IMHO.
 
Our network is planned and has multiple earth points. There are rules, for instance I think it is every third or fourth pole must be earthed. On tncs we are channeling the fault currents through the network, seems like a good idea to me that we know that the network can take it and not just hope
 
Our network is planned and has multiple earth points. There are rules, for instance I think it is every third or fourth pole must be earthed. On tncs we are channeling the fault currents through the network, seems like a good idea to me that we know that the network can take it and not just hope

So the neutral is earthed every third or fourth pylon to keep the resistance down?
 
I don't know the intervals and it may vary but the resistance between the neutral and true earth used to have a required maximum resistance of 20 ohm.
 
Not all the supply systems are the same. Some are very old and do not suit PME and cannot be upgraded. Systems put in place over a hundred years ago are not suitable for PME now and are being disconnected where possible, and upgraded again where possible. Not all supplies are straight forward three phase supplies due to historical diabolical methods of supply.
 
He he he, I had an SSE engineer round to look at a possible dodgy TN-S supply and asked if it could be changed to TN-C-S. Said it could, but 'you'd need to wait 5 weeks, why not do it yourself?', 'Que???'. He then went onto demonstrating connecting EC into neutral of service head :eek:.

I didn't, but kept his name in my little black book, for when I need a get out jail card. :)
 
He he he, I had an SSE engineer round to look at a possible dodgy TN-S supply and asked if it could be changed to TN-C-S. Said it could, but 'you'd need to wait 5 weeks, why not do it yourself?', 'Que???'. He then went onto demonstrating connecting EC into neutral of service head :)

Hmm. When my youngest was a linesman I asked him if he would remove a knockout on a bakerlite service head as I wanted to upgrade the Earthing conductor to 16mm, Ze was something like .20. His manager gave him permission so he opened it up and was suprised to see a split con cable feeding the head (definitely no n-e link) so the supply was tns although it appeared to be tncs. Out of interest I got the same Ze reading when both n & e leads were on the supply n as when putting the leads on the individual l, n & e conductors. The feed for next door was taken from this service head and someone had done a homemade earth to neutral connection assuming that pme was available. He enquired of the network planner who was insistent that the network would not support tncs and that next door must be tt'd (we were fine as tns). My son wasn't expecting this response, freely admitted that taken in isolation he would probably have thought that next doors supply was ok, and conceded that the only person who would really know the answer to such a query is the network planner responsible for the area.
Only the network planner can tell you whether pme is available. It is so easy to make an earthing enquiry it is stupid to not do it right
 
On the same lines as mhar, an assessment of the network conditions and type are crucial to allow for the permittance of a PME/TNCS conversion, the safety of the user, property as well as other users may be at risk if this is done by anyone but the DNO, we have 10's of thousands of miles of old degrading network cables and joints that won't be suitable, although I cannot comment on other countries and their own systems and regulations I can say that under no circumstances should anyone try to do their own conversion even if its just hypothetical, that puts a hypothetical family at risk and its just not worth thinking about let alone undertaking such a task.
 
Only the network planner can tell you whether pme is available. It is so easy to make an earthing enquiry it is stupid to not do it right

I didn't do it :(

His argument, was my TN-S supply was probably turned into TN-C-S in the road outside. Whenever, the DNO repair an old cable, it's always turned into PME.
 

Reply to TNCS - USING NEUTRAL AS EARTH IN BOARD in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Electrician Courses Green Electrical Goods PCB Way Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Pushfit Wire Connectors Electric Underfloor Heating Electrician Courses
These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then CLICK HERE and post a thread with who you are, and we'll send you some stats etc
This website was designed, optimised and is hosted by untold.media Operating under the name Untold Media since 2001.
Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock