When testing for earth contiuity is a tester that only delivers up to 200mA OK in every situation or should an instrument that has a 10A or 25A be used with certain loads or in certain types of bonding? Is this stated somewhere in the regulations?

I'm looking to ensure that some power supply units that are used are adequately earthed.  The units vary in load from <1kW to 15kW and have type 1 insulation class. The manufacturer recommends a bonding conuctor rated to carry 80A for the larger units. These PSUs are disconnected and moved from time ot time and I'd like to establish a guidance note for checking earth continuity when re-connected.

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  • HIgh current (e.g. ductor) tests used to be popular when testing steel conduit etc., but that seems to have fallen out of fashion of late - I suspect there's a school of thought that high current tests aren't without their risks and really only proved that something wasn't just hanging on by a fine strand - whereas a low current test plus visual inspection (e.g. all strands go into each terminal) can produce near enough equivalent results with less hazard during the test itself. I don't recall anything demanding high current tests in BS 7671 these days. That's for fixed wiring etc though - when it comes to individual items of equipment or assemblies that come under other standards, you'd have to check the particular standards concerned ... and of course any manufacturer's instructions. 80A seems quite a lot really, and might make quite a pop if something did fail (which presumably is a possibility, otherwise it wouldn't need testing). I suspect others here have better knowledge of other standards than me....

        - Andy.

  • Hi Andy, Many thanks for your reply. Like yourself I am a little old school and that is why I'm checking my knowledge is current. Only the most expensive testers have the higher current tests these days and alot of people only use battery powered units that have the 200mA test. The test equipment complies with BS EN 61557-4. I'm reluctantly inclined to accept that the test is done at this very low current dispite my misgivings as I have experience of issues being highlighted by the higher current rating. You mention steal conduit. I tested some steal conduit years ago and the 25A test revealed that someone hadn't tightened a running coupler up properly.

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  • Hi Andy, Many thanks for your reply. Like yourself I am a little old school and that is why I'm checking my knowledge is current. Only the most expensive testers have the higher current tests these days and alot of people only use battery powered units that have the 200mA test. The test equipment complies with BS EN 61557-4. I'm reluctantly inclined to accept that the test is done at this very low current dispite my misgivings as I have experience of issues being highlighted by the higher current rating. You mention steal conduit. I tested some steal conduit years ago and the 25A test revealed that someone hadn't tightened a running coupler up properly.

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