Isolation Transformer and its Secondary Protection

When using an isolation transformer in a control panel. in this case for  a motor heater, I think I should probably tie 0V to earth within the control panel.

- I would also like to protect the secondary, however what are the rules here, do you have to provide 2P MCB?

-Obviously I have an upstream 2P MCB of the transformer.

- I would think its perfectly OK to use only a single pole on MCB on the line side output of the transformer?

Does anybody have any comments on this?

Parents
  • Firstly this might be covered by more specific standards than BS 7671 - which might differ in some details.

    From a general/BS 7671 perspective though, there's probably a bit more to consider...

    1. What sort of voltages for the 2ndary are we talking about? (anything from 12V to 400V are seen in various applications)

    2. Are there any functional requirements about earthing?

    3. Are there any requirements for resilience? (e.g. while some systems will happily disconnect on 1st fault, others (e.g. some safety critical) are intended to keep working safely on 1st fault)

    4. What's the intended approach for shock protection? SELV, PELV, FELV, ADS, separation, double/reinforced insulation?

    Once you've decided all that it'll probably drop out whether the secondary should be earthed or not, and then how many poles you need to provide protection for. Generally for overload protection you need only protect n-1 of the live conductors, and for ADS with an earthed neutral generally only the line conductors need disconnection - but there are exceptions in specific circumstances.

       - Andy.

Reply
  • Firstly this might be covered by more specific standards than BS 7671 - which might differ in some details.

    From a general/BS 7671 perspective though, there's probably a bit more to consider...

    1. What sort of voltages for the 2ndary are we talking about? (anything from 12V to 400V are seen in various applications)

    2. Are there any functional requirements about earthing?

    3. Are there any requirements for resilience? (e.g. while some systems will happily disconnect on 1st fault, others (e.g. some safety critical) are intended to keep working safely on 1st fault)

    4. What's the intended approach for shock protection? SELV, PELV, FELV, ADS, separation, double/reinforced insulation?

    Once you've decided all that it'll probably drop out whether the secondary should be earthed or not, and then how many poles you need to provide protection for. Generally for overload protection you need only protect n-1 of the live conductors, and for ADS with an earthed neutral generally only the line conductors need disconnection - but there are exceptions in specific circumstances.

       - Andy.

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