Is 20 ohm earth electrode resistance required for back up supply?

A landfill site supplied from private transformer has asked us to connect a back up generator to a changeover switch in the weighbridge. I’ve had a look at BS7430 7.2.1 and it says an earth electrode with resistance of 20ohms or less is required. This is potentially quite difficult to achieve. It is a lot lower than the BS7671 requirement to be considered reliable. What is the reason for such a low figure and does it apply equally to private supplies as public supplies?

Parents
  • It is a lot lower than the BS7671 requirement to be considered reliable.

    That statement of reliability actually comes from BS 7430 ... note that BS 7671 doesn't really cover any specific requirements for earthing a 'source of supply', the correct standard for this is BS 7430.

    I’ve had a look at BS7430 7.2.1 and it says an earth electrode with resistance of 20ohms or less is required.

    Indeed it does at the moment.

    You might be interested in the alternatives, under certain circumstances, that are proposed in the draft for public comment of the next edition of BS 7430. If the relevant conditions are met, you might be able to get away with more than 20 ohms ... BUT ... this is a draft. See https://standardsdevelopment.bsigroup.com/projects/2023-01701

    You haven't provided some important information for us to be able to help further;

    1. What is the rating of the backup generator?

    2. What is the earthing arrangement intended to be in 'island' mode (where the backup generator supplies all, or part of, the installation when the grid supply is lost)?

  • The back up generator they have on site and wish to use is a Hyundai DHY6000SE. 5.2kw  6kvaThe manual seems to show overload protection of some sort but no indication of any earth leakage device. I am told the star point is connected to the chassis and the earths of the socket outlets and obviously is to be connected to the earth electrode although originally it may have been floating. It is proposed that it is connected to the changeover switch by an appliance inlet and a short trailing lead plugged into the generator. 

    The supply from the transformer is tns. It supplies a large section of the site but the back up generator is only proposed to be used for the weighbridge portacabin which has a small CU protected by 30mA rcd main switch. The loads are sockets lights, heaters, the bridge itself, some small floodlights and traffic lights. The main reason for the supply being off would be issues on the generation side (the site generates electricity from landfill gas). So mostly the earth connection at the supply transformer would remain in place but it is possible that maintenance work on the transformer would mean it being disconnected so would not want to rely on it. 

Reply
  • The back up generator they have on site and wish to use is a Hyundai DHY6000SE. 5.2kw  6kvaThe manual seems to show overload protection of some sort but no indication of any earth leakage device. I am told the star point is connected to the chassis and the earths of the socket outlets and obviously is to be connected to the earth electrode although originally it may have been floating. It is proposed that it is connected to the changeover switch by an appliance inlet and a short trailing lead plugged into the generator. 

    The supply from the transformer is tns. It supplies a large section of the site but the back up generator is only proposed to be used for the weighbridge portacabin which has a small CU protected by 30mA rcd main switch. The loads are sockets lights, heaters, the bridge itself, some small floodlights and traffic lights. The main reason for the supply being off would be issues on the generation side (the site generates electricity from landfill gas). So mostly the earth connection at the supply transformer would remain in place but it is possible that maintenance work on the transformer would mean it being disconnected so would not want to rely on it. 

Children
No Data