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Sparking earth conductor?

A strange one today, called to a house that had had its earth conductor pulled out by a dog.

A length of 16mm was lying on the floor, one end connected to the consumer unit.

I turned off the power, then reconnected it to the TN-S sheath clamp. But, on doing it, there was a tiny spark once connecting it. I did this a few times to see if it continued - it did. I didn't bother to take any voltage readings, but I did do a Ze, which gave a very reasonable 0.14 ohms.

Checking further, the cut out was a loop in system, whereby a 3 phase head supplied this house from one phase, and next door took another phase, along with a shared neutral.


I am presuming that next door have an earth problem, and are getting a good earth from the water pipe, and once the  earth conductor from the head is reconnected, they have a better earth. The cable supplying the next door house does not export an earth, it looks like it is 2 core split concentric, so probably TT earthing next door, or , possibly TN-C-S, but the first house had no PME stickers, or combined E and N.


Should I inform the next door neighbours about this, and could it be a hazard to my customer?
Parents
  • Under no fault conditions earthing and main bonding conductors will carry network circulating currents. They may also be carrying neutral earth fault currents from the installation or some other nearby installation that were not detected on the installation having passed the 240V Bang Test with >200M entered on the EIC.
Reply
  • Under no fault conditions earthing and main bonding conductors will carry network circulating currents. They may also be carrying neutral earth fault currents from the installation or some other nearby installation that were not detected on the installation having passed the 240V Bang Test with >200M entered on the EIC.
Children
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