SWA glanded in a plastic stuffing gland

Hi all, 

I’ve been trying to settle a difference of opinion and looking for advice. 
we have several supplies fed in SWA, they have all been glanded off with a CW gland into the DB. At the load end, the armouring has been taped up and a plastic stuffing gland has been used where it enters  metal EV Chargers, its been done deliberately to isolate the earth to the chargers. 
My colleague and I think this is poor practice and think an isolating gland should have been fitted or the armoured terminated into a plastic enclosure prior to entering the charger. the below regulations are what we believe are contravened. 

Regulation 134.1.1Good workmanship by competent persons or persons under their supervision and proper materials shall be used in the erection of the electrical installation.

regulation 526.8 Cores of sheathed cables from which the sheath has been removed and non-sheathed cables at the
termination of conduit, ducting or trunking shall be enclosed as required by Regulation 526.5.

Our colleagues think we are incorrect, yet have conceded that the use of a stuffing gland isn’t to manufacturers instructions and agree that the stuffing gland isn’t supporting the cable like a SWA glad would by clamping the armour.

what is everyone’s view on here? 

Parents
  • My colleague and I think this is poor practice and think an isolating gland should have been fitted or the armoured terminated into a plastic enclosure prior to entering the charger. the below regulations are what we believe are contravened. 

    It's not unusual to see armoured cables enter through stuffing glands into an internal enclosure or similar, but you need to check the stuffing glands are OK for this.

    However 'taping up' is not really insulation, and (with reference to Reg 411.3.1.1, 'Simultaneously accessible exposed-conductive-parts shall be connected to the same earthing system individually, in groups or collectively') what is there to protect electricians carrying out repair/testing from 'simultaneous contact' risk between the two earthing systems?

    Cold shrink sleeving is best for this. If the armour (as cpc) is required to be accessible for testing, then something more than 'tape that can be removed' such as insulate the armour with cold-shrink sleeving and if something available for testing is needed, provision of an insulated tail to a suitable 4 mm shrouded test terminal (all insulated), and suitable labelling, would be a better approach ...

    So, I would agree, this is a CDM risk that should have been evaluated and something more suitable put in place. This applies even for non-notifiable installations, and non-workplaces, as under CDM designers have a duty to ensure the installation is safe to maintain.

  • Stuffing glands chosen to grip the SWA adequately, will provide an IP seal where an SWA enters a box, with the outer sheath unbroken.

    Done properly, that is perfectly fine, if that is what you wish to achieve.

    Is the tape providing site applied insulation to armour on the outside of the box that would be exposed to touch it it were removed, or is it inside an enclosure  that prevents touch ?

    The former I'd worry about, the latter less so.  PVC insulation tape is pretty poor as insulation despite the title, and there are better products, as Graham notes, the cold shrink rubber boots are very good, as are the glue lined heat shrinks. Self amalgamiting tape when applied as per the makers instructions cannot be removed by unpicking and as such is as permanent without the use of tools.

    The norm for testing Zs is to comb a few strands into some sleeving, and put to a terminal, much as one might terminate split concentric, and then to over sleeve the whole cable in a way that ties in any ends that are cut short. The hazard  of exposure to an 'out of area' cpc potential is comparable to that from an exposed neutral bus bar and there are plenty of those accessible once CU covers are removed and very few dead bodies, it needs to be clear what it is, and that only those skilled in the art will have the lid off.

    It may not be beautiful, but  it's not bad.

    Mike.

  • Hil GKenyon, 

     I fully agree it should have been heatshrink used rather than tape and this is where the regulation referring to workmanship comes into play, we are taught that we should follow manufacturers instructions and the regulations, yet poor workmanship still occurs! 

  • However 'taping up' is not really insulation, and (with reference to Reg 411.3.1.1, 'Simultaneously accessible exposed-conductive-parts shall be connected to the same earthing system individually, in groups or collectively') what is there to protect electricians carrying out repair/testing from 'simultaneous contact' risk between the two earthing systems?

    That is a very interesting point.

    Although I don't think there's any specification as to what insulation should be used. The plastic sheath of an SWA itself isn't rated as electrical insulation but it seems reasonable that we all use it to protect the amour of a cable as it enters a location using a different earthing system. 

    Personally I'd rather terminate using an IP rated gland of the plastic variety into a plastic enclosure containing a splice for each live conductor and nothing else. That way there's accessibility for testing and not a lot of opportunity for a fault to either earthing system. But of course I don't have a sheet of paper from the gland manufacturer telling me about it's insulation rating.

    Heat shrink certainly offers far more integrity than tape, but whatever solution is still freelancing to some degree or other. In my mind before you can specify insulation you need to be clear what the two thing are which are being insulated from one another, and the particular hazard here isn't an L-E which would operate ADS, but an E[TN-C-S] to E[TT] fault which could rest undetected for a long time.

  • That is a very interesting point.

    Although I don't think there's any specification as to what insulation should be used. The plastic sheath of an SWA itself isn't rated as electrical insulation but it seems reasonable that we all use it to protect the amour of a cable as it enters a location using a different earthing system. 

    Agreed, barrier/enclosure would be OK too ... but importantly, whatever method is employed to protect the maintenance electrician, it needs to be clear what's going on, because it's not like it's a cpc of the installation the electrician is working in/near at the time (effectively).

    I

    Heat shrink certainly offers far more integrity than tape, but whatever solution is still freelancing to some degree or other. In my mind before you can specify insulation you need to be clear what the two thing are which are being insulated from one another, and the particular hazard here isn't an L-E which would operate ADS, but an E[TN-C-S] to E[TT] fault which could rest undetected for a long time.

    But it is an L-PE shock we're protecting against ... just that the PE in question we're looking at won't have the same local potential rise as the one the electrician is working on.

    'gapping' cables between installations is a VERY common occurrence, particularly in the ICT external cabling world.

    The only time it gets more involved, is where you have a cable from an HV 'hot site' going somewhere else ... this is more than an LV shock, but you'd need to think about far more than simple insulation in those circumstances. Again, BS 7671 has provisions for the designer to think about this from an overvoltage perspective.

    What worries me about the "gapping" situation, is that it seems "going TT" is happening more and more, without thought to the potential consequences.

  • What worries me about the "gapping" situation, is that it seems "going TT" is happening more and more, without thought to the potential consequences.

    Yes I was talking through an issue with an Engineer down in Australia the other day. They were perplexed that we have lots of TT. And they were right to be perplexed because there's rarely a compelling argument to TT where supplementary electrodes for the TN[-C]-S won't suffice.

    Especially now we've got plenty of options for PEN fault protection if it really is a concern. Generally I'm of the school that having everything at the same potential via main and supplementary bonding which I can be sure of the integrity often by visual inspection trumps separation where to validate safety someone's got to prove the absence of conductivity and hope nothing happens between inspections.

  • And they were right to be perplexed because there's rarely a compelling argument to TT where supplementary electrodes for the TN[-C]-S won't suffice.

    There are some caveats here ... and these are exemplified because of the increased reported accident stats with MEN (Australia/NZ version of PME) vs UK ... in Australia, but not New Zealand ...but in general, I agree

    Especially now we've got plenty of options for PEN fault protection if it really is a concern.

    Yes, new standard IET 01:2024 now available, which should help to address issues with unwanted operation etc.

    Generally I'm of the school that having everything at the same potential via main and supplementary bonding which I can be sure of the integrity often by visual inspection trumps separation where to validate safety someone's got to prove the absence of conductivity and hope nothing happens between inspections.

    This is, I agree, the best option if you have it ... the problem is, there are limits to the concept of 'equiopotential boding' unless you make sure it happens ... BUT even then, there's a difference making it happen at 50 Hz, vs GB frequencies ... and then when you look at the size of a site, distance amplifies resistance and inductance ...

    ... there is something that we call 'IGZ' ('ground window' in the US) that is a technique for dealing with that .. but believe me, it's all real. There are definitely very real limits to what we used to call the 'equipotential zone'.

  • The problem is that of course the earth is not flat, neither geographically, nor electrically,  So when I have my feet on the mud in one point and hold a wire, and my colleague holds the other end, and does the same, a current may well flow up one of us, along the wire and down the other, - there is a small DC for no better reason than the earth is a magnet, and we are rotating,  near built up areas there is a lot of AC from substations earthing arrangements and currents induced by nearby pylons, and everywhere there are radio frequencies  and impulsive currents from solar storms and lighting strikes around the world, and looking at the news, perhaps coming soon, though that has been said all my life, very large currents,  if there are any nuclear bombs being let off in the atmosphere...

    The saving grace is that over distances tens of metres these voltages are sub-volt, except the ones near substation earth electrodes, and generally pose no issues, but on large rambling campus installations or even big farms they become worth considering properly. Then, knowing that all the voltage offsets are safely piling up in the gap across SWA armour in a box or an insulated joint in the gas main you can point to, gives you the ability to measure and to plan to limit currents in a way that accommodates the effect rather than being caught out by it.

    If you don't,you risk introducing near field hazard zones around bits of metal that act as earthing of opportunity that do not have a keep out zone, that really should.

    As things get bigger or large chunks of metal get planted, the argument for TT increases. Interestingly I was working alongside a Kiwi sparks at an international scout event this summer, and over the odd beer we discussed earthing among many other things, and how they do not see the neutral as a 'live conductor' in the way we do but more as an earthy thing. The no of rods we drove in (one per genset)  amused him somewhat.

    Its not a simple topic, and all the methods exist for good reasons and have their place.

    Mike

Reply
  • The problem is that of course the earth is not flat, neither geographically, nor electrically,  So when I have my feet on the mud in one point and hold a wire, and my colleague holds the other end, and does the same, a current may well flow up one of us, along the wire and down the other, - there is a small DC for no better reason than the earth is a magnet, and we are rotating,  near built up areas there is a lot of AC from substations earthing arrangements and currents induced by nearby pylons, and everywhere there are radio frequencies  and impulsive currents from solar storms and lighting strikes around the world, and looking at the news, perhaps coming soon, though that has been said all my life, very large currents,  if there are any nuclear bombs being let off in the atmosphere...

    The saving grace is that over distances tens of metres these voltages are sub-volt, except the ones near substation earth electrodes, and generally pose no issues, but on large rambling campus installations or even big farms they become worth considering properly. Then, knowing that all the voltage offsets are safely piling up in the gap across SWA armour in a box or an insulated joint in the gas main you can point to, gives you the ability to measure and to plan to limit currents in a way that accommodates the effect rather than being caught out by it.

    If you don't,you risk introducing near field hazard zones around bits of metal that act as earthing of opportunity that do not have a keep out zone, that really should.

    As things get bigger or large chunks of metal get planted, the argument for TT increases. Interestingly I was working alongside a Kiwi sparks at an international scout event this summer, and over the odd beer we discussed earthing among many other things, and how they do not see the neutral as a 'live conductor' in the way we do but more as an earthy thing. The no of rods we drove in (one per genset)  amused him somewhat.

    Its not a simple topic, and all the methods exist for good reasons and have their place.

    Mike

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