Discuss Protecting a 2nd consumer unit in the Electrical Wiring, Theories and Regulations area at ElectriciansForums.net

Reaction score
29
Done this loads of times before, but this situation is quite unique so bare with me.

I've been asked to cable up an out building at a country park which is about 30m from another out building which has mains supply already installed from a main building some distance away via a 10mm SWA buried cable (It is fed from a Henley block in the main house, not through the main house consumer unit). This cable terminates in a small consumer unit with an RCD 63A main switch, and has 3 MCB circuits off that. (Those 3 circuits protected by the RCD main switch)

I'm going to hook up a 4mm SWA cable into a 32A MCB in the first out building consumer unit, but I don't want a fault in the 2nd out building to trip the RCD Main Switch in the first out building.

So my thought was, to not export the earth from the first out building to the second, but to install an earth rod at the 2nd outbuilding and it having it's own independent earth arrangement (TT). This would mean I could install an RCD in the 2nd out building without causing a selectivity issue.

I'm having one of those days with loads of unusual jobs, so my brain is fried - Am I right in my plan or talking a load of rubbish ? :)
 
My first thoughts would be to:
Use a switch fuse at the house end to protect the first cable, as to my mind it is non compliant using the DNO fuse and you are arguably making it less safe by adding load to it.
Install a second CU with MCB / replace MCB's with RCBO's except for 4mm at second building.
Keep DNO earthing as it's less hassle expense and arguably more reliable.

Undoubtedly someone smarter / more awake / different approach will be along shortly to contradict me. :)

Edit: Obviously not keeping RCD main switch when installing RCBO's
 
So my thought was, to not export the earth from the first out building to the second, but to install an earth rod at the 2nd outbuilding and it having it's own independent earth arrangement (TT). This would mean I could install an RCD in the 2nd out building without causing a selectivity issue.
This won't help the selectivity issue. Any current straying from the circuit downstream of the RCD will cause an imbalance at the RCD, so tripping it.
 
With this kind of job you have to keep an eye on
-selectivity of over current protective devices (and MCBs generally won't offer selectivity)
-selectivity for additional protection so a fault in the final area doesn't trip upstream RCDs, as you said
-total Zs
I think @ferg has a good plan and I wouldn't be happy extending an installation that is already hanging off the DNO fuse.
 
Done this loads of times before, but this situation is quite unique so bare with me.

I've been asked to cable up an out building at a country park which is about 30m from another out building which has mains supply already installed from a main building some distance away via a 10mm SWA buried cable (It is fed from a Henley block in the main house, not through the main house consumer unit). This cable terminates in a small consumer unit with an RCD 63A main switch, and has 3 MCB circuits off that. (Those 3 circuits protected by the RCD main switch)

I'm going to hook up a 4mm SWA cable into a 32A MCB in the first out building consumer unit, but I don't want a fault in the 2nd out building to trip the RCD Main Switch in the first out building.

So my thought was, to not export the earth from the first out building to the second, but to install an earth rod at the 2nd outbuilding and it having it's own independent earth arrangement (TT). This would mean I could install an RCD in the 2nd out building without causing a selectivity issue.

I'm having one of those days with loads of unusual jobs, so my brain is fried - Am I right in my plan or talking a load of rubbish ? :)
What type of earthing at the origin ? And is the earth exported to the 2nd building ?
 

Reply to Protecting a 2nd consumer unit in the Electrical Wiring, Theories and Regulations area at ElectriciansForums.net

Similar Threads

Can a domestic consumer unit feed another consumer unit, via the Main Switch. Details are: domestic property with 100A single phase supply...
Replies
9
Views
415
I am planning to go semi off grid with a victron and battery system. The system will be installed in an out building about 20 meters away from...
Replies
7
Views
693
Can you feed a consumer unit from another consumer unit, It would be supplied by a non RDC protected MCB. Is this allowed as I have always seen...
Replies
3
Views
2K
I wondered if it is OK to have 2 x Main Switches in the same consumer unit. One feeding the RCBOs in the House and one feeding the CU in a garage...
Replies
16
Views
691
Hi All I'm new here. I have just finished my NVQ and waiting to do my AM2. I have a question on selectivity as it has always slightly confused me...
Replies
5
Views
732

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