by ericmark »
Sat Nov 12, 2011 3:32 pm
Spurs from ring mains are not protected by the fuse in the plug.
Correct but the item plugged into the spur is. 434.2.1 restricts the lenght of a spur to 3 meters because the cable is unprotected.
If a short circuit occurs on a spur the fuse in the plug will never blow.
Again correct but we are not really worried about the spur 434.2.1 says "(ii) be installed in such a manner as to reduce the risk of fault to a minimum" so we would hope there will be not problem with the spur its self only things plugged into the spur. Although what you say is correct it is likely to be miss interpreted.
Only the protective device for the circuit will operate.
Again yes you have a cable rated at 21A being protected by a 32A MCB but unless more than a single outlet is connected to the spur this should not be a problem.
The ring circuit is the only permitted circuit where the CCC of the cable is LESS than that of the protective device.
Not correct there are a few exceptions for example current transformers and the CCC because the cable is doubled up is not exceeded you have for a balanced load 42A but it is protected at 32A. You have been pedantic up to now so you must expect the answer to be the same.
If ring continuity is lost on either line or neutral, possible when mr diy swaps a socket but doesn't test continuity of ring final circuit, you then have 2 x 2.5mm radials protected by a 30 or 23A protective device- warm cables as It <In
I install A2 and A3 radials- every conductor always protected as It > In
Yes this is the big problem with all DIY lack of testing. Even simple testing will highlight mistakes. If before adding a socket the ELI is 0.98 and after it's 1.2 then alarm bells ring. And one opens up the socket again and re-tests. However if one does not test the earth loop impedance mistakes will go unnoticed.
However there is no requirement to compare before and after results it's just electrical sense. Unfortunately not that common with the DIY guy. It's the same with the ELI (earth loop impedance) in general we know with a RCD see TABLE 41.5 NOTE 2:* The resistance of the installation earth electrode should be as low as practicable. A value exceeding 200 ohms may not be stable. Refer to Regulation 542.2.2. So 200 ohms is a pass. But in real terms one has to work out what would be expected. So if the ELI at the CU was for example 60 ohms then anything above 62 ohms should be investigated.
We as electricians understand this but for the DIY guy even if he does measure the ELI will it mean anything to him? They in general seem to think if it works then it's OK. However we know that's not the case. But how do we tell the DIY guy in a way he can understand that not to test is potentially lethal I don't know. Maybe you can put it in a way they can understand?