What happens during an EV charger install appointment?

  • geoffers's Avatar
    Level 45
    @geoffers NO! Water pipes may not be used for earthing .
    👍 - Appreciate that, but presumably the earth bonding to incoming gas/water pipes ensures equalised PD in the system, and would provide a "last resort" return path to earth should there be a failure of the main PME somewhere?
    Just trying to understand ... 🤓
    Last edited by geoffers; 1 Week Ago at 05:55.
  • meldrewreborn's Avatar
    Level 92
    @retrotecchie

    is one permitted to have multiple earthing systems? As the occupant I have no expertise in what type of earthing I have or need - shouldn’t it be flagged up some where near the meter?
    Current Eon Next customer, ex EDF, Zog and Symbio. Don't think dual fuel saves money and think the smart meter programme is a waste of our money. Chronologically Gifted. If I offend let me know by private message, but I’ll continue to express my opinions nonetheless.
  • geoffers's Avatar
    Level 45
    ... As the occupant I have no expertise in what type of earthing I have or need - shouldn’t it be flagged up some where near the meter?
    The majority of households these days are apparently TN-C-S (Terre-Neutral Combined, then Separated at the service head)

    So if you've got the big live/neutral cable coming in at the bottom and the earth comes out at the side (being connected to the incoming neutral) you're TN-C-S, also called PEN/PME
    Last edited by geoffers; 1 Week Ago at 13:40.
  • retrotecchie's Avatar
    Level 92
    @geoffers

    If you are on the end of the line and supplied by a pole transformer with overhead incomers, you can't have PEN/PME for obvious reasons. Your earth is a physical third cable, bonded to Neutral on the LV side of the transformer. The HV side of the transformer is earthed independently and the two earth's cannot be shared. That is known as PNB (protected Neutral Bonding). Actually the safest of all forms of earthing as you have two equipotential cables (N and E) and either are capable of handling a fault current to ground.

    It also means that a Phase-Earth fault is exactly the same as a Phase-Neutral fault in the property so OCDs will always react in the fastest possible time and ELCBs or RCD/RCBO devices aren't as dependent on low earth loop impedance as other earthing methods are.

    But I still use additional T-T bonding on external buildings as you should never rely on an earth return on a feeder cable if the distance from the main earthing busbar in the CU exceeds 40m.

    In fact, my solar installation has three separate earth's...the main T-T earth between circuits and ground, and separate earths for the DC side.

    Intriguingly, all DC equipment is positive earth, not negative earth. For the same reason that the supply voltages on copper phone networks are positive earth and the operating voltage is -48v with respect to earth.
    Don't shoot me, I'm only the piano player. I DON'T work for or on behalf of EON.Next, but am willing to try and help if I can. Not on mains gas, mobile network or mains drainage. House heated almost entirely by baby dragons.
  • geoffers's Avatar
    Level 45
    @geoffers

    If you are on the end of the line and supplied by a pole transformer with overhead incomers, you can't have PEN/PME for obvious reasons. Your earth is a physical third cable, bonded to Neutral on the LV side of the transformer. The HV side of the transformer is earthed independently and the two earth's cannot be shared. That is known as PNB (protected Neutral Bonding). Actually the safest of all forms of earthing as you have two equipotential cables (N and E) and either are capable of handling a fault current to ground.

    It also means that a Phase-Earth fault is exactly the same as a Phase-Neutral fault in the property so OCDs will always react in the fastest possible time and ELCBs or RCD/RCBO devices aren't as dependent on low earth loop impedance as other earthing methods are.

    But I still use additional T-T bonding on external buildings as you should never rely on an earth return on a feeder cable if the distance from the main earthing busbar in the CU exceeds 40m.

    In fact, my solar installation has three separate earth's...the main T-T earth between circuits and ground, and separate earths for the DC side.

    Intriguingly, all DC equipment is positive earth, not negative earth. For the same reason that the supply voltages on copper phone networks are positive earth and the operating voltage is -48v with respect to earth.
    Interesting, thanks 👍