Discuss Garage consumer unit in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

I agree with Taylor.

As it is a distribution circuit and not a final circuit it does not require RCD protection. However as it is TN-C-S it must be TT at the garage end. I'm sure you are not to export the earth from the house.

Is the water supplied via metallic pipework?

Could you not split the tails at the house end, install a small garage unit next to house CU, use 100A main switch and suitable circuit breaker to supply garage CU which will have its own RCD?
 
The house is TNCS, and the cable run to the garage approx 25m. Yes water at the garage. As the swa is not feeding any sockets or lights direct but is via a garage consumer unit I don't see why it requires a 30ma rcd at the house. If someone were to get a shock in the garage it would trip the rcd in the house and could be reset by someone in the house unaware why it's triped. Hence the 30ma rcd at the garage.
He is runing the swa from dual rcd cu.
So what does he do with the rcd on the side where the swa is run ftom??
 
Thanks for the replies, but what I am asking is about the protection feeding the garage consumer unit? The garage consumer unit has a 30ma rcd and 2 mcb's for lights and sockets. What I don't want is a 30ma rcd feeding another 30ma rcd from the house to the garage. As this is a domestic premises reg 411.3.3 requires additional protection for sockets not exceeding 32A via a 30ma rcd. And reg 411.3.4 requires that AC final ciruits with luminaries requires additional protection via 30ma rcd. As this is not an "AC final circuit" I'm asking what is normally best practice. As it will be a clean run of SWA cable between the 2 is it best to use a switch fuse from the house to the garage or a 100ma rcd and mcb. My thoughts are that an rcd would be the better option. Yes the garage can be a TT system.
What do you mean by it not an 'AC' final circuit? ?
I thought both the circuits are AC final circuits.
 

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