BigSpark

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Arms
Evening All,

I attended a job today to disconnect an Alarm System at a ground floor flat. On taking the consumer unit front off, discovered the incoming neutral tail to be 11 x 1.5mm single core cables which needless to say aren't all tight and secure in terminals. The incoming line looks to be 25mm 6181y albeit without the grey sheath. The main earth is 4 x what looks like 4mm solid core. They all come into the board in 1 grey sheath then split off.

Traced back, at some point in the flats roof it connects to an SWA ( point of connection is not accessible ) then back to a switch fuse with 80a fuse.

I dont think its an option to run any new cables ( which is my ideal method to sort issue) as its all in ceiling void with no obvious access but I am exploring this possibility with the flats owner/ building maintenance people.

The only option I can think that might help is heat shrink round the cables and ferrule the end but im not really happy with it.

Has anyone seen this before? Any ideas what's the thinking behind it? And what I can do make it safe?



20201113_165707.jpg
 
me too slow. time of day, well past beer o/clock. well that's my xcuse and i stand by it. rain or shine, and as zebeddee says,,, BOING< Time 4 bed.
 
Thanks guys, I had thought it might split concentric but have never worked with it so wasn't sure how it looks. Always thought it would be in a black XLPE sheath not grey twin and earth looking sheath. I may be wrong but is split concentric a non standard cable? And really only usually used by the DNO?
 
I would probably use a ferrule so they are all "as one" for wrangling.

I don't know if the insulated 16mm ferrule would accept the strands with insulation though, so it might be a simple uninsulated one and if necessary some heatshrink to avoid any exposed conductors if after crimping you find one of the little buggers has slipped back a bit.
Thanks PC1966. Appreciate the constructive reply. Il post a picture when it's all sorted ?
 
I would probably use a ferrule so they are all "as one" for wrangling.

I don't know if the insulated 16mm ferrule would accept the strands with insulation though, so it might be a simple uninsulated one and if necessary some heatshrink to avoid any exposed conductors if after crimping you find one of the little buggers has slipped back a bit.

I was just about to ask how people wire all these 11 wires into something until you put this. I was going with the same idea as yours but then to add solder to it as well, so that you get a better bonding. Not sure if that's over the top...
 
Cant see any reason to get involved, no sign of thermal stress to those conductors. You were only there to disconnect something, Just make sure terminals are tight.
 
Cant see any reason to get involved, no sign of thermal stress to those conductors. You were only there to disconnect something, Just make sure terminals are tight.
Good customer, didnt have a lot of time as, like you said i only popped round to disconnect. Potential of loose neutral cables if they aren't tight and engaged properly. Not something I'd like to leave to chance but each to there own
 
Evening All,

I attended a job today to disconnect an Alarm System at a ground floor flat. On taking the consumer unit front off, discovered the incoming neutral tail to be 11 x 1.5mm single core cables which needless to say aren't all tight and secure in terminals. The incoming line looks to be 25mm 6181y albeit without the grey sheath. The main earth is 4 x what looks like 4mm solid core. They all come into the board in 1 grey sheath then split off.

Traced back, at some point in the flats roof it connects to an SWA ( point of connection is not accessible ) then back to a switch fuse with 80a fuse.

I dont think its an option to run any new cables ( which is my ideal method to sort issue) as its all in ceiling void with no obvious access but I am exploring this possibility with the flats owner/ building maintenance people.

The only option I can think that might help is heat shrink round the cables and ferrule the end but im not really happy with it.

Has anyone seen this before? Any ideas what's the thinking behind it? And what I can do make it safe?



View attachment 62156
Awful lot of copper on show in the mcbs
 
Amazing that I've probably changed 300+ consumer units. Attended 1000's of jobs so looked in nearly all of those consumer units. All jobs around the county Nottingham, Leeds, Stoke on Trent, Stafford, Birmingham, Leicester, Coventry, Derby, Northampton and never seen split concentric used at all. And only ever heard it used by DNO. Cray Cray
 
Amazing that I've probably changed 300+ consumer units. Attended 1000's of jobs so looked in nearly all of those consumer units. All jobs around the county Nottingham, Leeds, Stoke on Trent, Stafford, Birmingham, Leicester, Coventry, Derby, Northampton and never seen split concentric used at all. And only ever heard it used by DNO. Cray Cray
Me too. In 21 years I've only seen it once, when I mistakenly flagged it on an EICR.
 
DNO supplies for PME systems will use a concentric cable where you have the phase core and a single PEN surrounding it. Split concentric as in this case have the phase core and separate neutral and earth surrounding it, not normally used by DNOs but is used for SNE supplies (Separate Neutral Earth).
 
DNO supplies for PME systems will use a concentric cable where you have the phase core and a single PEN surrounding it. Split concentric as in this case have the phase core and separate neutral and earth surrounding it, not normally used by DNOs but is used for SNE supplies (Separate Neutral Earth).
I’ve come across this couple of years ago. It’s to do with harmonics this install is most often used in residential block buildings where supplies are run together and apparently reduces harmonic distortion baffled also
 
I was just about to ask how people wire all these 11 wires into something until you put this. I was going with the same idea as yours but then to add solder to it as well, so that you get a better bonding. Not sure if that's over the top...
I seem to remember that solder isn’t permitted in this situation, or maybe that’s for tri-rated conductors?
 
Thank you. The N wires in split con are solid, so it looks like solder can be used.
(But it shouldn’t be necessary )

If properly crimped into a ferrule, then soldering should not be required, but I was thinking of just making the centre cables in the ferrule more sturdy while installing it. I could be wrong in my thinking...
 
Doesn't the reg also say multiwire? I'd say that would include the split concentric neutrals.

Yep, I agree. But seeing that we are not using solder alone for connection into screw terminals and the screw is clamping onto the ferrule, then I can't see a problem, from a reg point of view, with adding solder to the cables going into the ferrule, after it's been crimped.
 

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BigSpark

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1.5mm meter tails
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