mapj1:
It was called 48A in the older withdrawn versions of 60364-4-41 , then in 2001 it became
Table 41C (48A) – Maximum disconnecting times in the then new Electrical installations of buildings Part 4-41:
in the 2005 version it became Table 41.1 – Maximum disconnection times
As far as I know the numbers have not changed at all for years, and we are now in the 2017 edition.
The figures in the UK regs are a direct copy without the bits for 120V land.
Hang on ... in 2001 edition, Table 41C (48A) is NOT an equivalent of what we have now in Table 41.1. It only applied in cases where the relevant part 7 (IEC 60364-7-7xx) reduced the maximum permissible touch voltage via equipotential bonding to 25 V AC or 60 V DC. See C|Lauses in 413.2 of the 2001 version.
For TN systems under usual conditions, see Table 41A and 41B of that standard ... which became what we now have as Table 41.1.
mapj1:
It was called 48A in the older withdrawn versions of 60364-4-41 , then in 2001 it became
Table 41C (48A) – Maximum disconnecting times in the then new Electrical installations of buildings Part 4-41:
in the 2005 version it became Table 41.1 – Maximum disconnection times
As far as I know the numbers have not changed at all for years, and we are now in the 2017 edition.
The figures in the UK regs are a direct copy without the bits for 120V land.
Hang on ... in 2001 edition, Table 41C (48A) is NOT an equivalent of what we have now in Table 41.1. It only applied in cases where the relevant part 7 (IEC 60364-7-7xx) reduced the maximum permissible touch voltage via equipotential bonding to 25 V AC or 60 V DC. See C|Lauses in 413.2 of the 2001 version.
For TN systems under usual conditions, see Table 41A and 41B of that standard ... which became what we now have as Table 41.1.
We're about to take you to the IET registration website. Don't worry though, you'll be sent straight back to the community after completing the registration.
Continue to the IET registration site