SIMULTANEOUS CONTACT QUESTION - 2 x EV vehicles parked next to each other

Scenario

A remote block of 3 garages, 2 will be fed from separate properties via 40m of 10mm EV SWA connected to 2 individual new CU's

( no cars will be parked inside the garages but charged on the drive in front of the garage door)

1 property is TNC-S - Ze 0.30 Ohms and the other is visually a TNS but with Ze 0.32 Ohms and similar L-N reading.

The 2 chargers will have Pen fault protection and the relevant RCD protection as usual.

There are underground services within 1 -10m of a potential TT rod so could be problematic and a maximum 2.5m between separate garage earth rods is possible.


The concern is simultaneous contact between the 2 vehicles.

Regulation 411.3.1.1 states that “simultaneously accessible conductive parts shall be connected to the same earthing system individually, in groups or collectively.”

I am currently waiting for UK Power networks to confirm the 2 properties are connected to the same earthing system.


The questions are:

Is Pen fault and RCD protection enough when connecting both cars to TNS/TNCS or is there anything else we can do?

Is separate TT earth rods along with simultaneous risk assessment the safest option in this case?

Thank you


I've attached a sketch of the current proposal to help explain.
PDF

Parents
  • Dean,

    Obviously as you have indicated and good advice from Graham, and maybe its a remote option that could be considered.

    And that would be to install or erect some kind of "Wall/partition" between the two EV charging bays, to prevent similtaneous contact? Might not look pretty and obviously something a car could hit if not being carefull, but if done correctly could perhaps give an option if UKPN confirm the worst, just need to consider the fire rating and combustible nature of any "Wall/partition".

    Cheers GTB 

  • He also said if one client disposes of their charger/garage supply it still leaves the other with a 53 Ohms earth resistance.

    The point I was making wasn't simply about "disposal" of one earthing system, but more the maintenance of the bond between the two if the two chargers are to keep operating under the same conditions.

  • It does not even need to be a long partition - 1.25 m should be enough.

    I assume, of course, that there is no rule which forbids the EVs to be simultaneously accessible.

  • I assume, of course, that there is no rule which forbids the EVs to be simultaneously accessible.

    Not sure what is meant by 'rule', but if the EVs are not connected to the same earthing system, ADS according to BS 7671 is not guaranteed to be safe. See Regulation 411.3.1.1 ?

  • I used the word, "rule" loosely to include statutory requirements, HSE advice, British Standards, etc.

    As far as I can see, whilst BS 7671 applies to EVCPs (101.1.1(xxiii)), the vehicles themselves are out of scope, but I may be wrong.

  • ADS according to BS 7671 is not guaranteed to be safe

    Graham,

    Could you set out an example?

  • I used the word, "rule" loosely to include statutory requirements, HSE advice, British Standards, etc.

    OK, well if the 'etc' covers the IET Code of Practice for EV Charging Equipment Installation, which is cited by OZEV and Part S guidance, then yes, there is a 'rule' that covers this.

    As far as I can see, whilst BS 7671 applies to EVCPs (101.1.1(xxiii)), the vehicles themselves are out of scope, but I may be wrong.

    Yes ... but no ... Unfortunately, whilst BS 7671 covers the EV charging points, the fact remains that, when the vehicle is connected, the potentials at the exposed-conductive-parts of the EV charging point are transferred to the exposed-conductive-parts of the EV through the cpc in the vehicle connecting lead.

    If we accept as fact that simultaneously-accessible exposed-conductive-parts of EV charging points pose a risk if they are not connected to the same earthing system, the fact must also be true of any protective conductors and exposed-conductive-parts connected to the EV charging points that are also simultaneously-accessible.

    This logic is also validated through Regulation 722.411.4.1, which is fully intended to prevent transfer of potentials that appear on protective conductors in the installation due to PEN conductor faults in the supply from being transferred to the exposed-conductive-parts of the vehicle.

  • As far as I can see, whilst BS 7671 applies to EVCPs (101.1.1(xxiii)), the vehicles themselves are out of scope, but I may be wrong.

    Yes ... but no ... Unfortunately, whilst BS 7671 covers the EV charging points, the fact remains that, when the vehicle is connected, the potentials at the exposed-conductive-parts of the EV charging point are transferred to the exposed-conductive-parts of the EV through the cpc in the vehicle connecting lead.

    This is where the situation with EVs can get absurd. Naturally, the electrons take the path of least resistance (pun intended) and could not care less about man-made rules.

    So we think that these two properties share the same TN-C-S (?) earthing system, but what about two TT cottages in the countryside?

  • So we think that these two properties share the same TN-C-S (?) earthing system, but what about two TT cottages in the countryside?

    They might not, and other provisions are necessary ... but that's not in Section 722, it's in Part 4 of BS 7671, "general rules" ... Regulation 411.3.1.1, and would apply whether it's an EV supplied from the charging equipment, or other equipment 9fixed, or reasonable use from a socket-outlet) ?

    Not sure what point is being made here?

  • ADS according to BS 7671 is not guaranteed to be safe

    Could you set out an example?

    I suspect Graham had in mind some of the well known gaps ... for instance: the 0.4s (or 0.2s) disconnection time figures are all based on an assumption of body resistance values that only hold true for around 95% of the population ... for the other 5% there's an amount of luck involved if they're to survive such an event. The 0.4 (or 0.2s) ADS figures themselves only apply to smaller final circuits - higher rated circuits and distribution circuits are permitted longer disconnection times (and often do, to provide discrimination) - and earth faults on these circuits can raise the potential of the earthing system (including exposed-conductive-parts on final circuits) to hazardous voltages with no "safe" (ish) time limit. Main bonding is meant to mitigate the risks, but as there's no actual requirement for what it has to achieve - the overall effects will vary and may well not be enough to guarantee anything. Plus of course the risk of the first (undetected) fault being a broken c.p.c., or a stuck RCD. (Allegedly around 7% of installed RCDs won't perform as intended.)

    It all depends on what you mean by "safe" of course... guarantee that no harm will ever occur, or just the costs (in life, limb and damage to property) aren't too excessive.

       - Andy.

  • Graham,

    Could you set out an example?

    Sorry, I missed this.

    It's to do with assumptions based on disconnection times, particularly for TN systems, and also the fact that the shock will be hand-to-feet ... whereas 'simultaneously-accessible exposed-conductive-parts' provides a path hand-to-hand (which may render some of the assumptions for general ADS touch-voltage and time exposure invalid.

    Remember also, that it's not JUST the disconnection time of the EV circuit ... but could be a 1 s (TT) or 5 s (TN) for a distribution circuit in the same installation, which will transfer a potential through the cpc to the exposed-conductive-part.

Reply
  • Graham,

    Could you set out an example?

    Sorry, I missed this.

    It's to do with assumptions based on disconnection times, particularly for TN systems, and also the fact that the shock will be hand-to-feet ... whereas 'simultaneously-accessible exposed-conductive-parts' provides a path hand-to-hand (which may render some of the assumptions for general ADS touch-voltage and time exposure invalid.

    Remember also, that it's not JUST the disconnection time of the EV circuit ... but could be a 1 s (TT) or 5 s (TN) for a distribution circuit in the same installation, which will transfer a potential through the cpc to the exposed-conductive-part.

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