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Voltage drop in building networks

The recent posts about building networks has got me thinking - is there any recommendation for maximum permitted voltage drop within building networks?


Generally the DNO are allowed their +10/-6% variation and then BS 7671 generally allows 5% (or 3%) drop within the consumer's installation - and seemingly most ordinary appliances seemed to be based on a total of those - which is fine where the consumer's installation is directly connected to the DNO's system. But what about when there's maybe many tens of metres of extra cable involved courtesy of a BNO?


I guess that in the old days, when the distributor had responsibility all the way to the meter (so including the BNO as we'd now call it where the meter is at the consumer's end) the ESQCR limits would have applied at the meter terminals so the DNO would have had to designed to a tighter limit at the building's cutout - does anyone know if they still do that?


Otherwise there would seem to need to be some co-ordination between the design of the BNO and the consumer's installation - should the BNO formally 'declare' to the consumer's designer the v.d.? - perhaps as part of the tolerance on nominal voltage?


    - Andy.
Parents

  • EV charging equipment tolerant only to +/- 10 % of the stated rated voltage range



    While the previously 240V areas like us moved to 230V-6%+10% I suspect the previously 220V areas (i.e. continental Europe) are now on 230V-10%+6% (I think they gave up on a common +10%-10% tolerance for all of us a while ago). So it sounds like someone's just forgotten installation v.d. again.


    On the other hand, if EV charge points did start randomly dropping out when the voltage got towards the lower limit, that might not be an entirely bad thing from a grid stability and/or local network loading point of view....


        - Andy.
Reply

  • EV charging equipment tolerant only to +/- 10 % of the stated rated voltage range



    While the previously 240V areas like us moved to 230V-6%+10% I suspect the previously 220V areas (i.e. continental Europe) are now on 230V-10%+6% (I think they gave up on a common +10%-10% tolerance for all of us a while ago). So it sounds like someone's just forgotten installation v.d. again.


    On the other hand, if EV charge points did start randomly dropping out when the voltage got towards the lower limit, that might not be an entirely bad thing from a grid stability and/or local network loading point of view....


        - Andy.
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