D Skelton

~
Mentor
Arms
Nov 24, 2010
3,892
3,602
10,209,798
Milton Keynes
If you're a qualified, trainee, or retired electrician - Which country is it that your work will be / is / was aimed at?
United Kingdom
What type of forum member are you?
Heavily Qualified Electrician / Teacher / Tutor - etc
A customer has bought this as a back up generator for when his house power cuts out:

genny.JPG

It's a £300 ebay jobbie, 220V/380V, 'supposedly' with AVR. It's rated at 6.5kVA at 380V and has a three pole C3 OCPD. I went to have a look this evening (I hadn't seen it beforehand) and tested for a floating earth which it has. I didn't get a chance to test it whilst running. There are no manufacturers instructions or specifications, no definite information on the winding layout, no information on anything at all, anywhere. I've been searching the interweb for hours!

If I'm honest I wouldn't trust this chang wang piece of crap as far as I could throw it and have told the customer in no uncertain terms that he really needs to think about sending it back and getting something fit for purpose. He's looking for reasons to ignore me! The problem is that if I don't help him out as best I can and he finds someone else, I'm almost certain I'll be missing out on a rather tasty barn conversion for him later in the year!

Wants me to just link the N-E at the supplied schuko plug and throw in a stake. I'm not happy at all! Not one bit!

Bit of background - the only experience I have had with gennys so far is for transportable units (catering wagons), I've never wired up a genny relying on ADS before. I get the N-E linking thus creating a TN-S of sorts, I get the referencing of the neutral point to true earth, I'm also happy with using 3 point (make 1 - off - make 2) changeover switch. What I'm not happy with is the thought of linking at the plug, nor am I happy with the genny.

Thoughts please?
 
I've seen that genny before,last week there was a programme on tv about gypsy's that had taken over a village in Irealnd,anyway in summer they went to europe pulling various scams and one of them was selling that particular genny.The film makers got hold of one and got this french electrical engineer to have a look,he said at best they were useless and at worst dangerous.Maybe you should mention this to your client.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 3 people
I remember seeing that program to. Glorified paper weight springs to mind. Tell him it is not CE / EN approved therefore scrap.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 person
Bump!

I need to get back to the customer today really, I'm scratching around for the best possible advice I could give him, in the nicest way that ensures I'll see future work from him.

Any help from you guys would be appreciated :)
 
Persuade him to use it as it was intended. Just run a few extension leads around the house, if there's a power failure he must just start that piece kak and plug things into the leads.
 
What make is the genny supposed to be? I'd be interested to see what instructions are available online?
 
It has no make and there are no instructions! It's some imported chang wang piece of garbage.

I've been in contact with the customer and he's happy for me to advise on a better option for connection to his home for backup purposes. His budget is £1500 - £2000.

I'm just trawling the web and can't find any supplied as standard without a floating earth. If this is my only option I guess my question now is; do I bodge a N-E link at the plug (don't like this idea one bit) or do I fit a N-E link at the genny potentially invaliating any warranty? Hondas look like the best option with their smooth supply but they're all floating systems!

Ideally I'd like to find a genny with its neutral bonded to earth as standard.

Any ideas?
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 person
Only thing I would do different is to contact a manufacturer say Honda, explain you want to use the genny where earth systems need to be tied etc and ask if the genny can be modified internally or if there is a kit they supply to do this. It cannot be the first time this requirement has come up and lets face it a floating earth is no good to connect to a house with all the class 1 stuff around and a gas pipe to worry about etc. BTW if you do get any joy from a genny manufacturer let us know cos I expect an increased demand with the weather and all
 
  • Like
Reactions: 2 people
Guess I'll be phoning around next week! :)
 
If the generator is solely to be used as a back up power supply for the house, then fitting a N-E Link at the generator is really the only option. Depending on the generator this should be a reasonably easy operation and preferably non destructive to the generator, the connection can be a screwed joint so long as it is easily maintainable so it could be removed if required. I do not see why a standard modification to a piece of equipment by a competent person should invalidate a warranty.

Have a search for BS7430 COP for earthing of electrical installations.

Even the supplied generator could be used if the earthing arrangements could be sorted out and you were sure of the "Pure sine wave" output and it had any form of standard to which it is made.
At least if you made modifications to that the warranty would be non existent anyway.

For earth bonded neutral you would, I think, probably be looking for fixed generating sets that would exceed your customers budget.

All that said I may well be talking rubbish anyway, but I do hope you mange to sort something to maintain the customer base.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 2 people
I guess the only option then is to speak with the manufacturer regarding the warranty. The only gennys I see with pure sine wave output are at least £1k+. I know the Honda ones generate at DC and then rectify with an inverter giving a pure sine wave output, you can get these within budget, the only hurdle is the N-E link.

I'm not looking forward to phoning Honda though I must say!
 
This is a common problem when a site generator is redeployed as a back-up generator when it was never designed for it. Is it legal in the UK to bond the N+E at the plug or socket? I'd agree with Richard above, bond internally in the genny as long as the winding arrangement allows for it, I also don't see why there should be warranty problems if it's done by a qualified person in order to comply with local regulations and even more so if the genny was sold as a home back-up solution.
 
Thanks Marvo you reminded me of something: one recommendation was that you make up a lead that has the plug that fits to the generator with the NE bond.
In this way there is no wiring that is not earthed, but simply removing the plug returns the generator to floating earth.
However although this was recommended somewhere I am not sure of the legality, I cannot think if a problem with it but I could well be wrong.
The lead should obviously be marked up as not be used for anything on a standard fixed installation.
 
Is it legal in the UK to bond the N+E at the plug or socket?

I can't see how, that's my main gripe! In my mind you're essentially creating your own little TN-C-S at the genny end. As I said, I'm not a genny expert but it feels very wrong and unless told otherwise, I would never want to do it.

I'd agree with Richard above, bond internally in the genny as long as the winding arrangement allows for it, I also don't see why there should be warranty problems if it's done by a qualified person in order to comply with local regulations and even more so if the genny was sold as a home back-up solution.

You'd have thought wouldn't you? Who knows? The genny I'm now looking at is sold as a home back up solution. £999 for a diesel backup generator, still got a floating earth though! The retailler is even peddling this idea of adapting the plug!
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 person
Yeah, regardless of regs, bonding N+E in the plug especially doesn't feel right to me. It also leaves the possibility that another lead could be used in future that doesn't have the link.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 2 people
At least linking the two inside the machine means that I can attach a big fat sticky label telling people that this is the case.
 
That looks much better and far more fit for purpose. You shouldn't have a problem bonding N+E on that one, I'd expect it to come with an option to do it as it's designed as home back-up.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 person
Far better than that chang wang one he's already got! lol
 

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Electrician Courses Green Electrical Goods PCB Way Electric Underfloor Heating Electrician Courses Heating 2 Go Electrician Workwear Supplier
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

Advert

Daily, weekly or monthly email

Thread starter

D Skelton

Mentor
Arms
~
Joined
Location
Milton Keynes
If you're a qualified, trainee, or retired electrician - Which country is it that your work will be / is / was aimed at?
United Kingdom
What type of forum member are you?
Heavily Qualified Electrician / Teacher / Tutor - etc

Thread Information

Title
Genny dilemma
Prefix
N/A
Forum
Electrician Talk
Start date
Last reply date
Replies
41

Thread Tags

Tags Tags
genny

Advert

Thread statistics

Created
D Skelton,
Last reply from
D Skelton,
Replies
41
Views
414

Advert