This discussion is locked.
You cannot post a reply to this discussion. If you have a question start a new discussion

Diverted Neutral Current

So for the past 5 years if so I have been seeing and experienced a phenomena known as diverted neutral current or diverted networks current.

It has a few names. Much like the incredibly slow realisation that type AC RCDs have had their day. Even though type A has been about over twenty years.

I get at least two / three messages a week from electricians who are now using clamp meters to check the earth conductors of LV installations. Low and behold they find anything from 2A up to 169A in a few cases.

I have research this at work for the last few years and some of the work I have ensured is published via the following link.

http://tangle-tamers.com/page21.html

We have also managed to produce a visual guide for measuring this issue. This work also helped with the Broken PEN IET article. 

It appears the aged life expired state of the LV network is a bigger problem and will only continue to grow. The use of CNE cable has been a tad o IMO. Years ago the RECs admitted cost was the key factor, but made the decision based upon a REC. a government owned network. Since privatisation the DNOs have fixed on fail, leaving the LV side unmonitored to a large extent. This is now slowly changing. But we assume a broken PEN conductor or failure of this can cause hazardous over voltages but also large amounts of network currents bypassing the broken PEN and importing and exporting on domestic earthing in some cases.

whilst the number are small in the scheme or things. It’s a growing issue. The network know about it. But the industry appears to not be discussing it. Why do we not get a safety alert for all electricians nationally. If we find this why are the DNOs and yes some are taking horrific decisions. And in some cases charging. I’ve issued a safety alert for the Railway where I work. 

be good to gauge folks thoughts as a broken pen gives you CNE consideration in a home, not allowed by BS 7671 and also brings up the whole what is safe isolation with this in mind. We never consider earth as a energised conductor and only ever consider rise of voltage. Maybe with changing and ageing networks, non linear loads etc. We need to change the way we see things.

I live in hope the networks will be more open on this.

thoughts..

Parents
  • Welcome G4JBD, de G7VZY.

    The ham radio case is close to my heart too.  I'd not get too hung up on the fire risk to the mains wiring - the electrode resistance of your typical mast planted in cement and an RF earth  will be several tens of ohms at 50Hz unless you live in a salt marsh.  (or Essex it seems - link to amusing past test results)  But overheating a coax braid is possible if it becomes the site neutral for a while as the fault current could be 10-20A

    The safety of life case is the one to consider.

    Personally I run the radio gear as a TT island and would unplug the lot breaking all 3 poles of mains and all antenna feeds when it is not in use. No one who is not licensed should be touching it anyway, and my shack is a 'controlled environment' for which I am the design authority ;-) I'm lucky like that, or just pushy.   And I'll take it all away and fill the rawl-plug holes if I move house so no need to trouble the part P scorers I think.

    However your idea will certainly work, and is similar to the sort of thing the old live chassis TVs used to do on the coax. For HF and certainly LF you may prefer the alternative of double wound RF transformers if you are a QRO person as the caps that can take RF amps can get a bit big.

    Mike.

Reply
  • Welcome G4JBD, de G7VZY.

    The ham radio case is close to my heart too.  I'd not get too hung up on the fire risk to the mains wiring - the electrode resistance of your typical mast planted in cement and an RF earth  will be several tens of ohms at 50Hz unless you live in a salt marsh.  (or Essex it seems - link to amusing past test results)  But overheating a coax braid is possible if it becomes the site neutral for a while as the fault current could be 10-20A

    The safety of life case is the one to consider.

    Personally I run the radio gear as a TT island and would unplug the lot breaking all 3 poles of mains and all antenna feeds when it is not in use. No one who is not licensed should be touching it anyway, and my shack is a 'controlled environment' for which I am the design authority ;-) I'm lucky like that, or just pushy.   And I'll take it all away and fill the rawl-plug holes if I move house so no need to trouble the part P scorers I think.

    However your idea will certainly work, and is similar to the sort of thing the old live chassis TVs used to do on the coax. For HF and certainly LF you may prefer the alternative of double wound RF transformers if you are a QRO person as the caps that can take RF amps can get a bit big.

    Mike.

Children
No Data