Discuss Earth terminated outside. in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

Ok sorry should have sent over correct photo. The question I am asking what reg is the installation going against when the earth connection is outside of the downlight connector block ? The downlight fitting are LAP double insulated and don’t have a earth connection so the L&N are connected into the fitting and the CPC is then folded back outside and installed into a wago to link the CPCs together. Now what reg is this against or is the reg only for only the live conductors and will be no code with the downlight installed this way ?
 
526.8 refers to the cores of sheathed cables being enclosed as required by 526.5, it makes no mention for the purpose of the conductor and the reference to 526.5 is the methods contained in that Regulation for the enclosure not whether it is a live conductor or not.
See 543.1.1 whereby the cpc is no longer an integral part of the cable as the sheath has been removed.
The cpc should be enclosed or mechanically protected.
 
Aha, now I understand. The problem is not that the CPC connection to the fitting is exposed.... there isn't one because it's class II. The problem is the loop-through of the CPC from one T+E to the next via a Wago, which is exposed. The question is therefore partly whether the CPC can be unenclosed (as addressed by @westward10 above) and also whether a Wago terminal needs mechanical protection and enclosure to prevent the connection being damaged e.g. by movement of the cable. I think it would be up to Wago's instructions on the latter point but it's pretty obvious.

On a related note, is there not a reg that states any CPC that is not part of a sheathed cable or within containment must be a certain minimum CSA (2.5 or 4mm²?). I.e. you can run 10mm² 6491x through the ceiling without any containment but not 1.0?
 
On a related note, is there not a reg that states any CPC that is not part of a sheathed cable or within containment must be a certain minimum CSA (2.5 or 4mm²?). I.e. you can run 10mm² 6491x through the ceiling without any containment but not 1.0?
That is the gist of 543.1.1.
 
526.8 refers to the cores of sheathed cables being enclosed as required by 526.5, it makes no mention for the purpose of the conductor and the reference to 526.5 is the methods contained in that Regulation for the enclosure not whether it is a live conductor or not.
I'm not sure I agree with your interpretation of these regulations.

526.5 begins "Every termination and joint in a live conductor or a PEN conductor shall be made within one of the following or a combination thereof...". This regulation has no requirements for CPCs, therefore neither does 526.8 IMO
 
I'm not sure I agree with your interpretation of these regulations.

526.5 begins "Every termination and joint in a live conductor or a PEN conductor shall be made within one of the following or a combination thereof...". This regulation has no requirements for CPCs, therefore neither does 526.8 IMO
526.8 refers to cores of sheathed cables this covers all cores. It's reference to 526.5 is to the enclosure methods.
 
526.8 refers to cores of sheathed cables this covers all cores. It's reference to 526.5 is to the enclosure methods.
While I can see how you may have come to this conclusion (the regulation 526.8 could do with being clearer), I don't believe it to be correct. I believe 526.8 references 526.5 in full, and does not expect us to overlook the first sentence of 526.5.
 
images (2).jpeg


I assume its something like this that's being referred to. I come across them a lot still and the cpc issue is the least of the problems, lucky if you see the cap screwed down, cable grip in place but will see plenty of brown and blue exposed. Dreadful items.
 
the regulation 526.8 could do with being clearer
That wording has in fact been practically identical since at least 16th edition (earliest I have to hand) and I've never considered it at anything other than face value before tonight:

1674428535781.png

I can't see that it actually makes sense without applying the 1st sentence too of the 1st reg too.

Imagine a non-sheathed 10mm (single insulated) CPC running in conduit, then glanded from a BESA box, and off to bond a water pipe. According to the 2nd reg alone that would need to be enclosed, right?
I believe it to be the first sentence of the 1st reg that says "no, no need" as it's not a live conductor or a pen conductor.

I've never thought of it any other way, and am happy to be corrected.
 

Reply to Earth terminated outside. in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

Similar Threads

Hi, plumber here so please be gentle (or take the p-ss ;) ), I am supposed to be installing a UV water steriliser for a customer. I have some...
Replies
16
Views
2K
I have had these lights installed by a contractor whose work is normally very good. He has not connected the earth in each fitting as there is a...
Replies
37
Views
2K
Hi, while carrying out an EICR at a farm cottage on Friday i came up against a problem early on. Whilst measuring the Ze the reading i obtained...
Replies
22
Views
2K
Background: I am not an electrician, I am a retired professional engineer high power broadcast transmitter design , but am dabbling outside my...
Replies
15
Views
2K
I have been asked to look at this report as the customer has been given (in their words) 'A very high quote plus VAT'. It doesn't look well...
Replies
5
Views
644

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Electrician Courses Green Electrical Goods PCB Way Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Pushfit Wire Connectors Electric Underfloor Heating Electrician Courses
These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then CLICK HERE and post a thread with who you are, and we'll send you some stats etc

YOUR Unread Posts

This website was designed, optimised and is hosted by untold.media Operating under the name Untold Media since 2001.
Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock