Two DNO 11Kv/400/230v transformers on different HV lines originally supplied two separate buildings on an industrial site. The two separate buildings are now one large steel framed one. So we have two DNO intakes and no clear demarcation within the installation. I remember reading somewhere about issues arising in such situations but cannot find the article. I am keen to establish if any issues are serious enough to seek alternatives. One of the intakes has a Biomass plant feed-in with g59 relay. Both intakes are circa 1MVA.
Not wishing to second guess the IDNOs, but a building with two TNC-S LV supplies is one of those things that needs to be done carefully ?
Because in effect you have two NE bonds, and two lots of bonding that put the neutral onto the structural steel, plumbing etc, when those neutrals join up round the back via a common low impedance street network ground / DNO neutral / HV ground there is potential to have a constant load dependent voltage gradient along the building. This is similar to the metal water main serving as a second PEN in a street of houses, but with less impedance to limit the current. Even though the voltages may be fractions of a volt the currents may be tens or in an unlucky case, hundreds of amps, with all the associated magnetic fields and this is 'a complication' , and is is either avoided by tying both together very solidly - easy if side by side, less so at opposite ends of a barn, or more easily using the electrode resistance in a TT system is to reduce the potential for large circulating currents.
In the end the folk who know the network details should be the DNO, but things like building change of use of a building that was separate modules into one big one, or the addition of factory piping running between previously isolated buildings can introduce problems where there originally were none.
Not wishing to second guess the IDNOs, but a building with two TNC-S LV supplies is one of those things that needs to be done carefully ?
Because in effect you have two NE bonds, and two lots of bonding that put the neutral onto the structural steel, plumbing etc, when those neutrals join up round the back via a common low impedance street network ground / DNO neutral / HV ground there is potential to have a constant load dependent voltage gradient along the building. This is similar to the metal water main serving as a second PEN in a street of houses, but with less impedance to limit the current. Even though the voltages may be fractions of a volt the currents may be tens or in an unlucky case, hundreds of amps, with all the associated magnetic fields and this is 'a complication' , and is is either avoided by tying both together very solidly - easy if side by side, less so at opposite ends of a barn, or more easily using the electrode resistance in a TT system is to reduce the potential for large circulating currents.
In the end the folk who know the network details should be the DNO, but things like building change of use of a building that was separate modules into one big one, or the addition of factory piping running between previously isolated buildings can introduce problems where there originally were none.