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SWA Cable Above ground and earthing the armour

When using SWA cable underground I always earth the armour, regardless of whether the armour is used as the cpc or not. The armour does provide some mechanical protection and it is important that the armour is earthed so that if the cable were penetrated (e.g. by a garden fork), the supply would automatically be disconnected by the protective device under this fault condition.
I have a situation on an existing domestic installation where I will be changing the consumer unit.  The 3-core SWA cable to the hot-tub rotary isolator is above ground and clipped to an outside wall.
The cable has not been terminated with brass glands, and at the ends the armour have been taped up, so no exposed conductive parts. The armour is not being used as the cpc.
At the rotary isolator for the hot-tub, stuffing glands have been used. The cable feeding the hot-tub does rest on the ground for about 1m before going into the hot-tub enclosure.
The earthing arrangement is TNCS, however at the hot-tub rotary isolator, the TNCS earth is not exported and there is an earth electrode for  the hot-tub’s cpc
Would you expect the armour to be earthed? Is it acceptable to terminate SWA without brass glands?
Parents
  • Also, if the cable armour is unearthed and the cable damaged on the ground the armour could become live and the R.C.D. would not trip off. Somebody barefoot could come into contact with the faulty part of the cable and form a circuit to earth and thus receive a shock. R.C.D.s are not guaranteed to provide 100 per cent prevention of death, especially if faulty or slow in operation. Hopefully if the armour is earthed the R.C.D. will trip off automatically in case of mechanical damage of the cable, or the M.C.B. will trip off BEFORE a shock risk is present.


    Z.
Reply
  • Also, if the cable armour is unearthed and the cable damaged on the ground the armour could become live and the R.C.D. would not trip off. Somebody barefoot could come into contact with the faulty part of the cable and form a circuit to earth and thus receive a shock. R.C.D.s are not guaranteed to provide 100 per cent prevention of death, especially if faulty or slow in operation. Hopefully if the armour is earthed the R.C.D. will trip off automatically in case of mechanical damage of the cable, or the M.C.B. will trip off BEFORE a shock risk is present.


    Z.
Children
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