Cable grouping

An interesting point made by one of my colleagues today.

If we consider a 36-way TPN distribution board that is full. How can we apply a grouping factor to those circuits at the point they leave the distribution board (the worst case position) without it making the cables so large that they can't be terminated if some of them are lighting or ring final circuits installed in trunking?

Clearly we could use sub-distribution, etc. but I have seen plenty of installations exactly like this with fairly typical 2.5sqmm or 4.0sqmm cables on the lighting and ring circuits.

Is it simply that the point of exiting the board is ignored and the main run of the cable is used for consideration of the grouping factor? If the cables are de-rated on the basis of where they come together at the board how does any installation ever practically make use of a 36-way TPN board without substantially over-sizing cables?

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  • You can also note that the total outgoing current from the DB can't exceed the incoming - so rather than looking at say 20Ax36 = 720A things are probably limited to something closer to 3x100A=300A or 3x125A=375A - i.e. overall diversity is probably a lot more significant than considering each circuit individually would suggest.

      - Andy.

  • Good point Andy. That does give a good starting point when you're trying to decide on a sensible diversity to apply too. Having said that should we be accounting for diversity within the cable sizing calc?

  • I thought about this some more this morning Andy and I think this is why it works from a practical point of view instead of simply applying the calculations from the regs.

    If we have worst case grouping of 20x circuits going out from a 125A DB then the circuit loads must average at 6A each. Obviously there will be some higher or lower and that will vary during operation but going from burn's reply above a 32A ring circuit is going to be <30% loaded when carrying the average load so in the absence of more specific operational information there is a case for ignoring the circuit in terms of grouping factor.

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  • I thought about this some more this morning Andy and I think this is why it works from a practical point of view instead of simply applying the calculations from the regs.

    If we have worst case grouping of 20x circuits going out from a 125A DB then the circuit loads must average at 6A each. Obviously there will be some higher or lower and that will vary during operation but going from burn's reply above a 32A ring circuit is going to be <30% loaded when carrying the average load so in the absence of more specific operational information there is a case for ignoring the circuit in terms of grouping factor.

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