Installing US socket outlets to a commercial office space in the UK

Morning Everyone,

I would like some advice on the following please.

We have been asked by a client of ours to install a number of socket outlets to power equipment imported from the USA, within a commercial office space.

I am aware that we will need to install a step down transformer and increase the frequency to 60Hz in order for the imported equipment to operate safely and correctly.

Can anyone advise how we stand from a regulatory point of view?  Will the installation after the step down transformer be regulated under BS:7671? Will we need to install 30mA additional protection to to these sockets (lower voltage - 110V site supplies do not require this?) Do we need to use a specific type of outlet? - I am aware of non-shuttered and shuttered outlets available.  

Any advice is appreciated thank you.

Parents
  • Changing frequency is not very practical at anything other than very low powers. Conversion to DC and then inverting, or in old school method, for lots of power, motor-generators are the only sensible ways.

    What sort of loads are they intending to connect ?  most office electronics does not care about 50Hz or 60Hz, and probably does not care about 110V very much either- things like laptops and monitors and printers etc are universal mains these days. Anything big like a heater would be better to buy one over here.

    A US voltage UPS may be a way forward if there is some bespoke kit that really must, but I'd be pushing back.

      UK 110V building site supplies are center earthed while US 100V has one side as neutral so the possible shock to ground is doubled. I think some RCD would be needed - but then the Americans have GFCI that are more or less the same thing.

    From an installation perspective unless the building is owned outright, you probably want anything you do to be more like an appliance or a rack and some extensions rather than full blown fixed wiring.

    Things like US airbases and embassies in UK and mainland Europe have US style supplies, but  they are not properly under  local law. Certainly when I was last on a US airbase, and that was in the last century, they had their own 60Hz generators for the site und once inside the armed guards all installation was to US code.

    I suspect a normal UK  office does not enjoy that freedom- or budget.

    Mike

Reply
  • Changing frequency is not very practical at anything other than very low powers. Conversion to DC and then inverting, or in old school method, for lots of power, motor-generators are the only sensible ways.

    What sort of loads are they intending to connect ?  most office electronics does not care about 50Hz or 60Hz, and probably does not care about 110V very much either- things like laptops and monitors and printers etc are universal mains these days. Anything big like a heater would be better to buy one over here.

    A US voltage UPS may be a way forward if there is some bespoke kit that really must, but I'd be pushing back.

      UK 110V building site supplies are center earthed while US 100V has one side as neutral so the possible shock to ground is doubled. I think some RCD would be needed - but then the Americans have GFCI that are more or less the same thing.

    From an installation perspective unless the building is owned outright, you probably want anything you do to be more like an appliance or a rack and some extensions rather than full blown fixed wiring.

    Things like US airbases and embassies in UK and mainland Europe have US style supplies, but  they are not properly under  local law. Certainly when I was last on a US airbase, and that was in the last century, they had their own 60Hz generators for the site und once inside the armed guards all installation was to US code.

    I suspect a normal UK  office does not enjoy that freedom- or budget.

    Mike

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