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Came across one of these today at work. Had L1 L2 L3 and switched Neutral, but also had an N link bar inside.
Just wondering what it's for?
Just wondering what it's for?
Reminds me of one job where we used a 4 pole isolator for a large motor. 3 poles for the motor and the 4th for the cooling fan, with the fan neutral unswitched.We also often see a 4 pole isolator that has a neutral and earth bar internally as well. It's just to acommodate different wiring options with switched or unswitched neutrals as far as I know.
I'm a trainee so was just wondering why it was there.As above, looks like a standard enclosure that the manufacturer could use for everything from single to six-pole isolators. Yours clearly started life as a 3-pole, with the 4th tacked on. I can think of at least 3 scenarios where your neutral would not go through that pole, from isolator feedback to forced air cooling to switching the armature and field of a DC motor. I think you might be getting a bit hung up on this 'extra unneeded neutral bar'. It likely adds about 10p to the cost of the isolator, so use it or don't as appropriate.
Ah, that explains quite a bit, and means I must also apologise if I went a bit hard at you. I was treating your question like a tradesman was asking "What's a screwdriver for?" rather than a learner looking to learn.I'm a trainee so was just wondering why it was there.
No probs mate. This is year i get to ask stupid questions ?Ah, that explains quite a bit, and means I must also apologise if I went a bit hard at you. I was treating your question like a tradesman was asking "What's a screwdriver for?" rather than a learner looking to learn.
No it's just bare. The guys i am working with said it was the N though. Incidentally we were hooking up machines with no neutral anyway.Hard to see from the picture but is the fourth switch terminal marked as N.
32A 4 Pole Surface Mount Isolator IP65 - https://www.yesss.co.uk/32a-4pole-surface-mount-isolator-ip65 It's one of those. We're basically using them as an emergency stop.Even magnified it doesn't appear to have a marking on the 4th contact, jut the arrow in the plastic case.
From the style (plastic screws) it looks to be a Europa, which also appears very similar to older Klockner style disconnectors.
There's space on the left side for another contact so it may be that the 4th contact is auxiliary and could have a 5th.The 4th contact will have details on the side.
Strictly speaking the neutral is the separate terminal on the enclosure. The fourth switch terminal I would consider an auxiliary as it is not marked for a specific purpose and can be used for several things.No it's just bare. The guys i am working with said it was the N though. Incidentally we were hooking up machines with no neutral anyway.
It's an 'Eris Industrial' 32a/20a from Yesss.
Is there any advantage/disadvantage to the way we've done it? The machinery we're hooking up doesn't use neutral so it's not used anyway.Strictly speaking the neutral is the separate terminal on the enclosure. The fourth switch terminal I would consider an auxiliary as it is not marked for a specific purpose and can be used for several things.