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

  • but a pair of neighbours could each hang one on the same boundary wall.

    If they agreed to do so? Often boundary walls are shared property ... Party Wall Act may also apply to work on or near a boundary wall.

  • We probably ought to start a breakaway thread on 'when earthing is not good for you' but the risk of lifting a large patch of terra-firma to an dangerous voltage, measured relative to some  electrode in the ground carrying no current, placed far far away, is often over imagined, at least for short rod-like structures. For the UK 'classic' 4ft long 5/8 dia copper plated steel rod found beside the doorsteps of terraced houses with TT, even if the rod is raised to the full 240V, while an amp or two flows into the mud, the surface voltage falls away to a safe level within a metre or so of the top of the rod.

    Mike

  • Looks like Regulation 411.3.11 has been satisfied.

    Hopefully this thread highlights various options for installers.

     Thank you for providing this feedback.

    I'm glad the DNO has been pragmatic and provided this information, because, as some have highlighted, this is going to be a more frequent occurrence, especially with "cross-pavement" charging (charging on-street, from EVSE located in a consumer's premises, where the consumer has no off-street parking options).

  • the surface voltage falls away to a safe level within a metre or so of the top of the rod.

    Certainly by 2.5 m for horizontal underground pipes ... 

    But 411.3.1.1 is to help reduce hand-to-hand potentials between accessible metallic parts that are solidly bonded to different earth potentials, rather than hands-to-feet ?

  • Indeed, but the hands to feet current path is not so easily mitigated by fences, brickwork etc.  Hand to hand connections round a barrier need arms like Mr Tickle. (*)
    This was really intended as follow-on comment  from;-


    "Possibly a bigger risk is.. a potential significantly different from the surrounding ground itself - ether because the ground is better at being at "true earth" potential, or because the local ground potential is raised (by lead sheathed cables or bonded metallic pipework) via the influence of another earthing system. "

    The forum post-ordering algorithm strikes again.

    Mike

    (*) For those wondering what I'm wittering  on about he is a cartoon character with very long flexible arms, ideal for testing simultaneous contact situations.

  • You would think so, but a pair of neighbours could each hang one on the same boundary wall.

    It would have to be quite a substantial wall ... I've been looking at a relatively small HP (5kW output) and the spec sheet says is weighs in at over 100kg!

        - Andy.

  • I thought front fences could only be 1 metre tall?

  • Hmm. that's the weight of the complete compressor and every thing presumably to minimise the size of the indoor part-  the reverse is also done where most of the thing is indoors and outside is just a heat-exchanger  so mostly empty space with a thing like a large car radiator, and a fan.

    But you could certainly imagine either type standing side by side on the front of a row of terraced houses either direct underneath or off to one side of the downstairs front window.

    Accessible to all and sundry passing by then.

    Mike.

  • Some of the previous owners of our house erected a tall wooden fence right out to the front property line and were told to apply for retrospective planning permission, which was denied.

    There may be limitations on the height of a fence and people may not realise what its purpose is.

  • I thought front fences could only be 1 metre tall?

    I think that's just for fences next to a highway - elsewhere (including elsewhere in the front garden), as I read Permitted Development Rights, up to 2m is OK. So as long as the front garden is deep enough....

       - Andy.