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Temporary Connection of Generator to Domestic Distribution System

Hi All,

I recently came across a very interesting article - link below:

https://electrical.theiet.org/wiring-matters/years/2020/82-september-2020/mythbusters-6/

Where I find this article very interesting, is in relation to the requirement / or potentially non-requirement  of an Earth Spike, for the Temporary connection of a Generator to a building (in the article a Site Office is mentioned).

Please refer to the attached rough sketch / scheme for the Temporary Connection of Generator to Domestic Distribution System, which was originally based upon Figure 4 from the linked article - I wonder whether this could be considered, at least in principle, to be an appropriate proposal for the temporary connection of a generator to a domestic premises? In the attached scheme, there is no Earth Spike, and a 30mA RCD is included at the output of the generator, which would be connected to the generator via an appropriately sized SWA Cable. I would consider the potential for some nuisance tripping of the upstream 30mA RCD (in reality, this would be a rare occurrence) to be an acceptable price to pay, for the added protection that it would provide.

I would very much appreciate, if any of you could possibly find a moment or two, in order to share your thoughts in relation to the above / attached.

Thanks,

Harry G.


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  • One big difference between your setup and those described in the article, is that your protective conductors remain connected to the DNO's - so if you were to suffer a L-true Earth fault on your system, you'd potentially be raising the DNO's PE/PEN conductor (which may well not be connected to Earth any more due to the fault or maintenance) to a hazardous voltage above True Earth. Your 30mA RCD might provide some shock protection, but there would sill be some risks (RCDs do fail) and would certainly risk upsetting meter readings used by DNO personnel to diagnose faults. I can see the DNO not being at all happy with such an arrangement.

    Attempting to switch the DNO's PE conductor is very difficult to do safely - to avoid the possibility of any simple failure leaving the installation connected but without an Earth, you'd need a pretty sophisticated arrangement whereby the PE contact was closed first, then verified somehow, before the L & N contacts could be closed, then in the reverse process, likely you'd want to verify that the L contact has indeed opened before opening PE.

    Legally, the ESQCR demand that any installation that has on-site generation, even switched alternative, meets BS 7671, and the general requirements of BS 7671 for generators demand a local means of Earthing. So while alternatives like "IN-S" might exist for some section 7 special locations (mobile units, construction sites etc), you'd be on a sticky wicket applying them to a simple (or in some ways more complicated) domestic installation.

       - Andy.

  • Hi Andy,

    Thanks for your informative reply.

    In light of your comments, I have revised my proposal - I am thinking that the attached updated proposal sketch / scheme should now
    be in keeping with accepted practices / compliant with the regulations, for a domestic premises, with TN Supply?

    Best Regards,

    Mark G.

Reply
  • Hi Andy,

    Thanks for your informative reply.

    In light of your comments, I have revised my proposal - I am thinking that the attached updated proposal sketch / scheme should now
    be in keeping with accepted practices / compliant with the regulations, for a domestic premises, with TN Supply?

    Best Regards,

    Mark G.

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