Wiring Regs scope, inside 19" rack cabinets?

Hi everyone,

The US-based company I work for needs to send a 19" rack cabinet of computers, PLCs and network equipment to the UK for temporary installation in a research facility. We've been advised (quite rightly) that we need to ensure compliance with UKCA marking requirements and be able to provide a technical file for this. It's been a while since I was involved in compliance things, but my understanding is that the technical file is normally just about demonstrating compliance with the harmonised norms, e.g the low voltage directive. However as this will be a cabinet "installed", i.e. fixed, in position, with power distributed within it, I wondered if it is also in scope of the BS 7671?

Advice much appreciated on this, especially from anyone with practical experience of a similar situation.

Thanks,

Will

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  • 13A socket to BS1363

    I think there's a convention (at least) that 13A plugs shouldn't normally have a protective conductor current exceeds 3.5mA - certainly when it reaches 10mA BS 7671 demands either a BS 60309 plug or hard-wiring (or earth monitoring).

       - Andy.

  • I think there's a convention (at least) that 13A plugs shouldn't normally have a protective conductor current exceeds 3.5mA

    That's definitely not currently the case, and in reality was only the case in some product standards, but not others. For example, BS EN 62368-1 permits 5 mA standing protective conductor current for equipment with a standard plug ('pluggable Type A' equipment).

    Perhaps this is one reason for removal of Regulation 543.7.1.201 in Amendment 2:2022 - there are now no constraints in BS 7671 for connection of equipment having protective conductor currents up to 10 mA (although there are various limits in product standards, for example moving to an industrial plug or fixed wiring where a certain limit below 10 mA is met).

    Thinking about it logically, you'd have to assume a multi-way adaptor couldn't be connected via a standard plug otherwise, because it might reasonably be expected to have protective conductor current > 3.5 mA ?

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  • I think there's a convention (at least) that 13A plugs shouldn't normally have a protective conductor current exceeds 3.5mA

    That's definitely not currently the case, and in reality was only the case in some product standards, but not others. For example, BS EN 62368-1 permits 5 mA standing protective conductor current for equipment with a standard plug ('pluggable Type A' equipment).

    Perhaps this is one reason for removal of Regulation 543.7.1.201 in Amendment 2:2022 - there are now no constraints in BS 7671 for connection of equipment having protective conductor currents up to 10 mA (although there are various limits in product standards, for example moving to an industrial plug or fixed wiring where a certain limit below 10 mA is met).

    Thinking about it logically, you'd have to assume a multi-way adaptor couldn't be connected via a standard plug otherwise, because it might reasonably be expected to have protective conductor current > 3.5 mA ?

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