Been at a chalet in a holiday park. There is a 2 core swa distribution feed to the chalet glanded to an external ip rated enclosure which feeds through to a connected enclosure housing to a meter. Feed then goes from the meter back into first enclosure to din rail mounted dp isolator from which di meter tails into the (internal) cu. Below is an earth rod, the 16mm earthing conductor following a different route into the property to the cu. 6" from the rod the earthing conductor has been cut and a loop of 16mm cable crimp joined. This loop goes up to the enclosure with the isolator where it is connected to a din rail mounted connector next to the isolator and where a 16mm tail has been connected from the incoming swa banjo. Basically this 'new' earth from the swa has been inserted into the tt system and this appears to be the case at all neighbouring chalets. Zdb is .36 Ohms but when the earth path from swa is disconnected (just using the rod) it is 634 Ohms in sodden ground. Obvious that an improvement was required but puzzled as to why it had been done in this manner leaving the rod connected and at the neighbouring chalets as well.
Rang the ELECSA helpline as I have no way of determining the type of earthing system the swa is connected to and to enquire whether I should ditch the tt system and take my earth direct from the swa banjo avoiding the (poorly) crimped loop of 16mm which has been introduced. Their advice concurred with my thoughts that there should only be one type of earth system so ditch the rod and the only truthful entry on the certificate is 'lim' to describe earthing system.
Quite happy with their response until I started thinking!!! On any tn system where the Zs is lower than the Ze we effectively have two types of system anyway so, as long as the rod is in close proximity to the property so as not to vastly increase the size of the equipotential zone, is there any real reason to ditch the rod? In this particular case the rod is within the footprint of the building as it is under the roof overhang. I do not yet have a copy of gn8 to refer to.
Rang the ELECSA helpline as I have no way of determining the type of earthing system the swa is connected to and to enquire whether I should ditch the tt system and take my earth direct from the swa banjo avoiding the (poorly) crimped loop of 16mm which has been introduced. Their advice concurred with my thoughts that there should only be one type of earth system so ditch the rod and the only truthful entry on the certificate is 'lim' to describe earthing system.
Quite happy with their response until I started thinking!!! On any tn system where the Zs is lower than the Ze we effectively have two types of system anyway so, as long as the rod is in close proximity to the property so as not to vastly increase the size of the equipotential zone, is there any real reason to ditch the rod? In this particular case the rod is within the footprint of the building as it is under the roof overhang. I do not yet have a copy of gn8 to refer to.