Connection of back-upgenerator to TN-C-S domestic installation

Hi All. I'm a medically retired electrician with additional strings to the bow throughout my career. From contracting on commercial electrical installations to building/designing large industrial containerised generators to managing landfill gas generator installations and finishing at building maintenance engineer covering alot of variable skills with HVAC and BMS.

I try to keep the mind busy and do what I can. 

Appreciate your viewing my question I'll try to be as descriptive as possible. 

My home is TN-C-S supply with no extraneous parts ( water supply is plastic pipe and no gas supply).

Approximately 5 years ago I installed a large metal garage/workshop 7.5m by 4.5m(concrete floor with metal box section frame bolted to the concrete pad) 

I supplied the garage with a 6mm armoured  via 30ma RCD and 40amp MCB ,armour being connected to house distribution board and isolated at the garage termination so as not to export the earth as per regulation,I installed 2m deep electrode and additional 1m deep electrode both wired back to garage DB. So in effect garage is on a TT system.

The house distribution boards (8 way mem bs88 and 4 way mem2000 RCD mcb) I want to change out for 1 large regulation DB , one in looking at is MK dual 100amp 30ma isolator with type 2 SPD rest populated with mcb's.

To the nub of my question. I want to install back up generator (7.5kva peak 6.25kva constant)which will be sited out the back of the metal garage( outside garage building not inside)some approx 12m from house. I'll give you my thoughts on what I'm thinking of installation to ensure complete separation from incoming mains supply to remove chance of any back feed especially under fault condition.

1. Install a single phase 32amp incomer socket ( will be supplied from generator in event of outage)to the exterior of house.

2.Wired back to a 20amp double pole rcbo enclosure in distribution cupboard.

3.From rcbo into a manual 3 pole  transfer switch.

4.The network supply wired the manual 3 pole transfer switch then from transfer switch to new distribution board (dB).

5. The generator chassis will be connected to garage earth electrodes when in use.

6.. 3 pole manual transfer switch? My thinking is to switch L. N. and the earth. 

My thinking on this: when mains is in use garage supply has isolated earth DB side connected only  as previously discussed to protect cable/circuit going to garage rest of house still using supplier earth path . 

When generator supply is used the whole installation house including garage would be effectively TT system this way no chance of back feed to the supplier network including under fault conditions from my/consumer end giving earthing is also switched at the manual transfer switch, i

Q.1.is this 3 pole manual transfer idea (switching earths) idiotic/unnecessary/ not advisable ?

Q. 2. Should I include a type 1 SPD to the 20amp 30ma generator supply enclosure inside distribution cupboard given large metal shed and lighting strikes ? 

Sorry for long winded pre log just trying to ensure you've all the information needed. Would be grateful for your thoughts and indeed advice.

  • Hi Andy, handy illustration thank you.

    Maybe just one small point, what i was suggesting is that during mains fail and generator is to be used, the generator earthing connection  is linked to the existing garage earth pit electrode and removed after generator use.

    1. Install generator behind metal garage outside of the building, with neutral earth link in windings and chassis/engine/alt connected to earth pit electrode (one of the two pits of electrodes linked together currently to garage db for metal garage TT set up from house TN-C-S supply, supply cable earthed at house db isolated at garage).

    with this in mind all should be equipotential, and all earths inside and out have physical cabling connection during generator use. 

  • Maybe just one small point, what i was suggesting is that during mains fail and generator is to be used, the generator earthing connection  is linked to the existing garage earth pit electrode and removed after generator use.

    OK, so with the generator plugged in, would the workshop's earthing system be connected to the PME Earth? (defeating the TT'ing of it)

      - Andy.

  • Yes ,that was my thoughts buddy so in generation mode all earth's are linked externally and internally by earth link from existing earth pit electrode to genset frame, chassis etc then via earth in generator supply cable to house inlet ,house inlet internally connected to MET. When on mains supply again , generator supply cable removed garage is back on TT.

  • While running on genset, the system is TN-S, with a connection to a DNO earth that is only acting as either as an additional electrode or perhaps an extraneous part in that mode.

    To the DNO it is PME/TNCs but the neutral the DNO earth is combined with is not the  one that is in use for neutral current when on genset.

    It also may or may not be disconnected in whole or in part, if the DNO side of things is off and being worked on, so it can't be considered as the main means of earthing.

    Mike.

  • Hi Mike I do agree in your summation in principle, there are some things to note.

    While running on genset, the system is TN-S, with a connection to a DNO earth that is only acting as either as an additional electrode or perhaps an extraneous part in that mode.

    The earth connection from the generator "when generator is running"(no mains supply) is only connected to the DNO via the earth withing the power supply coming into house from said generator.  If you see in the detail above the generator/chassis /engine itself when running is connected via10mm earth cable connected to 1 earth pit electrode (of which there are 2 pits, them selves linked together for the Garage supply.

    What you highlight ref DNO connection is why originally i wanted to switch the earth within the "break before make bypass" so in generator mode all earthing inside and out would be only referenced back to earthing electrodes.

    It also may or may not be disconnected in whole or in part, if the DNO side of things is off and being worked on, so it can't be considered as the main means of earthing.

    I totally agree, again why i wanted to switch the earth so in generator mode my home is completely as an "island" with no ref to DNO because if there is a mains failure 99% fault is on their line/network.

    From my reading and understanding switching the earth would be within regulations but opened my question to forum for advise and thoughts, alot of very helpful and knowledgeable people on here .

  • OK, so more like this then?

    I presume you've TT'd the workshop to avoid exporting PME earth to the steel structure outdoors (PME earths not always being close to true Earth potential, especially during network problems, a broken PEN being the extreme example). But with this setup at the at the very time the PME earth is most likely to be hazardous (when the distribution network is playing up), you're deliberately connecting it to the workshop? That doesn't feel ideal somehow.

    Also in that setup the workshop would be an extraneous-conductive-part w.r.t. the PME earth - so the connection would have to meet the requirements of a main bond - i.e. min 10mm² all the way (which means quite a chunky flex for the generator and suitable sized plug & inlet).

    If you wanted to have the workshop TT and at have the house/generator in the same equipotential zone as the workshop, one solution might be to TT the house as well (and don't have any connection to the PME Earth). Often that's not practical as bonds to metallic services can defeat the isolation, but in your case with plastic water/gas that might work.

    Alternatively keep PME for the house, but arrange things so the genny and workshop are out of reach of each other - e.g. locate the generator further away or interpose and insulating barrier (wooden fence) or similar.

      - Andy.

  • Hi gkenyon, could i ask for your thoughts . Much appreciated.

    Sure ... and apologies for not having time to reply for a few days.

    So, from item 1 and items 1 and 3, if I've understood correctly what you are describing, with the generator plugged in, the garage is connected to the PME earthing arrangement through its earth electrode ... which we don't want?

    Also, I guess this would require the generator cable cpc, and the link to the earth electrode, to be sized as cpc for the PME system?

    Which is why, a good few posts back, I was assuming the generator would be connected TT back to the house via the garage?

    I'm not seeing a way round that at the moment.

  • hang on - up thread it says the generator is not in the garage, but is connected direct into the house. As described it will therefore provide a TNS supply to the house. And perhaps that supplies a TT to the garage or also TNS,depending what is done with the interconnection of the genset CPC and the garage earth electrode.

    To supply the house as TT would require a 2 wire feed (just L and N) from the genset into the house and yet another independent electrode - which given what has been said about the available space, won't actually be very independent.

    Mike

  • hang on - up thread it says the generator is not in the garage, but is connected direct into the house.

    Indeed, but with the generator located close to (within reach) of the outside the garage/workshop - which has steel frame/cladding bonded to the TT system. Off grid the genny may well be TN-S of itself, but it'll (normally) still be bonded to the DNO's earth terminal - so still subject to all the usual worries of PME (hence we don't want to export it to the workshop, I would have thought).

      - Andy.

  • hang on - up thread it says the generator is not in the garage, b

    No, 'behind the garage' ...

    nstall generator behind metal garage outside of the building,

    perhaps next to, the garage, but connected into the house when plugged in, more importantly.

    411.3.1.1 applies even outdoors ...

    And the PME issue, bonding size etc, still there when the generator is plugged in.

    To supply the house as TT would require a 2 wire feed (just L and N) from the genset into the house and yet another independent electrode - which given what has been said about the available space, won't actually be very independent.

    BUT, ignoring PME bonding requirements is against ESQCR?

    AND, ignoring 411.3.1.1 (if relevant) means there is a safety issue?

    Indeed, but with the generator located close to (within reach) of the outside the garage/workshop - which has steel frame/cladding bonded to the TT system. Off grid the genny may well be TN-S of itself, but it'll (normally) still be bonded to the DNO's earth terminal - so still subject to all the usual worries of PME (hence we don't want to export it to the workshop, I would have thought).

    Quite so !