Thought for the day ... Can SPDs undermine safe isolation?

I've been gradually retrofitting SPD to my own installation so have been pondering a few of the trickier cases and where the surge currents/voltages are likely to flow, which led me to an odd thought... If I have an SPD after a point of isolation (which is the usual arrangement in CUs etc) - is there a risk of the SPD transferring a nasty voltage back onto the (live) conductors that are meant to be isolated?

On the basis that SPDs work by creating a momentary (or short duration) short circuit - they'll raise the potential on PE as much as they reduce it on the live conductors (at least on a TN system) - that's fine of course as equipment will mostly only see the voltage difference between live conductors and PE. On TT I presume PE will be dragged up a lot more than L is dragged down ... but the p.d. between them is almost eliminated just the same.

My thought process went something like this...

1. Simple (say TT) installation, local isolation for a bit that's being worked on (perhaps outdoors?)

2. Add some SPDs..

 

normally still safe to work on..

3. During a surge..

maybe not quite so good.

Yes, some of the current will be diverted to terra firma by the installation's electrode, but likely not all of it.

The surge should be a very short duration (if from lightning or some such), but might be longer (e.g. if the overvoltage is due to a broken supply N or some other cause).

(And it does tie in with the old conundrum about isolating the N/PE if working outside the equipotential zone.)

Anyhow I thought I'd throw the idea out there to see what people thought. Mostly I suspect it's a non-issue, but maybe there's a few corner cases where the normal advise for safe isolation might be augmented with "..and pull out the SPD cartridges".

   - Andy.

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  • With the circuit isolated, the circuit's L and N will be floating (give or take a little bit of deliberate or incidental capacitive coupling). So I don't see why the circuit SPDs (the RH ones in your diagrams) would start to conduct.

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  • With the circuit isolated, the circuit's L and N will be floating (give or take a little bit of deliberate or incidental capacitive coupling). So I don't see why the circuit SPDs (the RH ones in your diagrams) would start to conduct.

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