UPS floating

(UK based industrial equipment to comply with BS 7671, operated by skilled authorised personnel.)

I have several class I devices that are supplied via a 230VAC 2200VA UPS which itself is supplied from the ‘mains’ via a single pole C16Amp 30mA  RCBO

When the UPS is in ‘bypass’ or ‘online’ mode the upstream mains supply is the primary supply source and protection against electric shock is achieved through the usual means of basic protection and automatic disconnection of the supply.

When the mains circuit breaker is off or has tripped due to an earth fault the UPS battery and inverter take over as the new supply source (unsurprisingly), but now none of its load side live conductors are bonded to earth. The UPS will continue to detect short circuits and overloads and consequently shut itself down but obviously won’t detect a single fault to earth.

Does this installation effectively become an IT system when the UPS is the supply source and should I make use of various monitoring devices (411.6.3) or is the installation forever deemed a TN system and fault protection switches from ADS to electrical separation? I’m struggling to see how I can comply with the latter (see 413.3.6) because the exposed conductive parts of the class I devices are permanently bonded to earth.

The UPS isn’t supplying emergency services, just a request by the customer so as to keep some basic control equipment operating and logging data whilst the plant shuts itself down.

Advice always greatly appreciated!

Parents
  • Is the UPS floating ? (Neutral -earth) not connected or are they connected . If N-E bonded you could fit secondary RCD to the output of the UPS to comply with 411.3.3

  • Ordinarily, the UPS is floating, no N-E or L-E bond assuming no faults already exist when it kicks in, but which might be the case if the mains RCBO has just tripped. 

    I’m certainly looking at fitting an RCD to cover a secondary fault although I would want to avoid nuisance tripping and there are a couple notes under 411.6.3 that are putting me off using one.

    I am thinking an IMD that can warn the skilled operators might be more useful which is an option under IT systems …. so I’m also interested to know if the UPS (when in battery mode /floating L-N) is a true IT system and can be treated as such? 

  • A Isolated UPS (floating) providing true isolation is an inherently safe electrical environment, if a line to earth fault occurs there is no reference to the incoming earth, and therefore no fault current can flow. But do we still need to comply with 411.3.3; 415. Or are you looking at something like Fig 710.2 for medical IT system ?

Reply
  • A Isolated UPS (floating) providing true isolation is an inherently safe electrical environment, if a line to earth fault occurs there is no reference to the incoming earth, and therefore no fault current can flow. But do we still need to comply with 411.3.3; 415. Or are you looking at something like Fig 710.2 for medical IT system ?

Children
  • A Isolated UPS (floating) providing true isolation is an inherently safe electrical environment, i

    Only for a single item of equipment - in fact, where electrical separation supplies multiple items of equipment, this can only be done where the installation is controlled or under the supervision of skilled or instructed persons (see Regulations 413.1.2, 413.1.3 and Section 418).

    It's important to differentiate IT System with ADS (Regulation Group 411.6) from Electrical Separation (Section 413).

    It is also important to consider with information technology equipment (ITE), especially Class I, or where combination power supplies have Class I input and Class III-compatible output, that the circuits which lead to protective conductor currents may at some point provide (non-zero impedance) fortuitous earthing of live conductors in the low voltage AC circuit.