Why 70V rms and not 50V rms - O-PEN faults

Hi, always follow this forum as such a great source, so my first time with a question, hoping someone can advise.

Why `voltage between the cpc and earth exceeding 70V rms` for Reg. 722411.4.1 (iii) and not 50V as in Reg. 411 touch voltage threshold. Is 70V deemed acceptable ?

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  • But one difference is that while an earth fault on a TN distribution circuit might be higher than 70V it's not going to persist for more than 5s - whereas 69.9999V could persist indefinitely as far as the open-PEN device is concerned.

       - Andy.

  • whereas 69.9999V could persist indefinitely as far as the open-PEN device is concerned

    It could ... perhaps even higher if you think about measurement tolerances in the lab etc ... and in a real PEN fault, you might get touch-voltages in excess of CmaxU0 for up to 5 s which could also be problematic.

    But to fully understand what's going on here, we need to move away from the curves from IEC 60479-1 and use the values presented in IEC/TS 60479-5, which presents touch-voltage and duration values for different circumstances.

    NOTE: IEC 60479 series is not really intended to be a de-facto standard in its own right ... it's a 'horizontal standard' for consideration by committees developing electrical safety standards. Hence, what you see in those 'horizontal standards' won't always be reflected in a product or installation standard.

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  • whereas 69.9999V could persist indefinitely as far as the open-PEN device is concerned

    It could ... perhaps even higher if you think about measurement tolerances in the lab etc ... and in a real PEN fault, you might get touch-voltages in excess of CmaxU0 for up to 5 s which could also be problematic.

    But to fully understand what's going on here, we need to move away from the curves from IEC 60479-1 and use the values presented in IEC/TS 60479-5, which presents touch-voltage and duration values for different circumstances.

    NOTE: IEC 60479 series is not really intended to be a de-facto standard in its own right ... it's a 'horizontal standard' for consideration by committees developing electrical safety standards. Hence, what you see in those 'horizontal standards' won't always be reflected in a product or installation standard.

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