Bonding of a bolted-together equipment rack located in a vehicle

I have a custom built stainless steel equipment rack that is made up of many individual sections of stainless steel angle that are bolted together to form the complete rack. The stainless steel parts will not have any paint or finish applied. 

The equipment rack will be mounted in a vehicle with the bottom sections of the rack bolted to the metal floor of the vehicle. 

The equipment rack will have 12 Volt and 28 Volt equipment mounted on it.

My question.....

- Does a single wire connection from the vehicle's Main Earth Terminal (MET) to the equipment rack meet the protective bonding requirements?

I am hoping that I do not need to have a separate wire from the MET to each individual piece of steel angle, or a 'strap' linking the bolted-joints.


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  • An isolation transformer may be a consideration for a single piece of equipment,  but not an installation supplying two or more. 

    The first AC 230 V fault to the rack and vehicle metalwork is not noticeable, the second causes problems.

    www.google.com/url

    Edit- it’s not impossible to use IT earthing, but 717.411.6.2 or 717.413 applies and you cannot simply buy a blue portable power tool transformer to use.

  • An isolation transformer may be a consideration for a single piece of equipment,  but not an installation supplying two or more. 

    An isolation transformer can be used for things other than separation - creating a local TN-S system where "T" is the chassis rather than the planet for example - you can then have ADS even if the supply PE is faulty or inadequate and it's much more difficult to get hazardous voltages between vehicle and  ground outside. (e.g. fig 717.6 in BS 7671 section 717).

    Separated system feeding two or more items for current-using equipment (oddly class I accessories don't seem to count) are permitted if you have skilled or instructed person about - in that case you'd have all the exposed-conductive-parts connected together by a protective conductor - so a 2nd fault (from a different line) causes a short-circuit (ADS style) which should cause disconnection.

       - Andy.

Reply
  • An isolation transformer may be a consideration for a single piece of equipment,  but not an installation supplying two or more. 

    An isolation transformer can be used for things other than separation - creating a local TN-S system where "T" is the chassis rather than the planet for example - you can then have ADS even if the supply PE is faulty or inadequate and it's much more difficult to get hazardous voltages between vehicle and  ground outside. (e.g. fig 717.6 in BS 7671 section 717).

    Separated system feeding two or more items for current-using equipment (oddly class I accessories don't seem to count) are permitted if you have skilled or instructed person about - in that case you'd have all the exposed-conductive-parts connected together by a protective conductor - so a 2nd fault (from a different line) causes a short-circuit (ADS style) which should cause disconnection.

       - Andy.

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