

One thought - a thought experiment as it were - AFAIK there's nothing in BS 7671 to prevent you installing one of those "voltage optimisation" units that reduce 240V to 230V or somesuch - if you did that your charge point would be far less likely to trip out - but the entire thing would still comply with BS 7671. Arguably setting the tolerance a little higher is no worse than installing such a unit...
- Andy.
The only issue there Andy, if there was an O-pen fault, the VO would keep the fault within the safe limits and would not be detected.
Its one of these situations where we are damned if we do damned if we dont.
if there was an O-pen fault, the VO would keep the fault within the safe limits
Depends how the VO unit works - if it's just reducing the voltage by a fixed percentage (as I'm fairly sure some do), then chances are the charge point would still trip - just that there's a narrow margin where it may not trip now where is would before. If it was more of a dynamic adjustment (changing taps to try to keep the output at a fixed voltage) and it was able to do so for a large range of voltages, then yes the operation of the open-PEN device could be significantly compromised.
I wasn't suggesting installing a VO unit though - just making the point that installing one upstream of your open-PEN device isn't prohibited by BS 7671 - so you could have a conforming installation by doing just that. Without the VO, tweaking the upper voltage limit on the open-PEN device could have almost exactly the same effect - so it might be a reasonable argument that doing so results in a level of safety that while it might not be as good as it might be, is still no worse than that provided by an entirely BS 7671 compliant installation. Which is the usual start for justifying any departure from the standard...
- Andy.
if there was an O-pen fault, the VO would keep the fault within the safe limits
Depends how the VO unit works - if it's just reducing the voltage by a fixed percentage (as I'm fairly sure some do), then chances are the charge point would still trip - just that there's a narrow margin where it may not trip now where is would before. If it was more of a dynamic adjustment (changing taps to try to keep the output at a fixed voltage) and it was able to do so for a large range of voltages, then yes the operation of the open-PEN device could be significantly compromised.
I wasn't suggesting installing a VO unit though - just making the point that installing one upstream of your open-PEN device isn't prohibited by BS 7671 - so you could have a conforming installation by doing just that. Without the VO, tweaking the upper voltage limit on the open-PEN device could have almost exactly the same effect - so it might be a reasonable argument that doing so results in a level of safety that while it might not be as good as it might be, is still no worse than that provided by an entirely BS 7671 compliant installation. Which is the usual start for justifying any departure from the standard...
- Andy.
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