Stu Jackson
Well-Known Member
Understood, Stu.




The only current flowing through you will be the transient current to charge the capacitance of the system.
Thanks. But by tying the neutral to ground, you have partially negated the benefit of the isolation transformer, in that the internal live can no longer float. So now instead of being vulnerable only to live/neutral shocks (which are unlikely) you are vulnerable to live/ground shocks (much more likely).
In fact, as far as I can see, the RCD isn't necessary in a system with a floating isolation transformer - if you touch only the live wire, the system will float and the neutral will move down to -240V rms. The only current flowing through you will be the transient current to charge the capacitance of the system. It is the tying of neutral to ground that introduces the need for the RCD as now you can no longer float the live.
Thanks for the comments, I do know that there is connection between the neutral and earth after the isolation transformers.
Here in South Africa all electrical domestic and industrial must have an RCD fitted by law, I don't think that is the case in the UK.
Thanks. But by tying the neutral to ground, you have partially negated the benefit of the isolation transformer, in that the internal live can no longer float. So now instead of being vulnerable only to live/neutral shocks (which are unlikely) you are vulnerable to live/ground shocks (much more likely).
In fact, as far as I can see, the RCD isn't necessary in a system with a floating isolation transformer - if you touch only the live wire, the system will float and the neutral will move down to -240V rms. The only current flowing through you will be the transient current to charge the capacitance of the system. It is the tying of neutral to ground that introduces the need for the RCD as now you can no longer float the live.
Don't think so, I'm pretty sure everywhere in Europe standardised on 240V ages ago.
Wrong I'm afraid. It's what I thought until I considered the question more deeply. If the mains system is fully floating after a transformer then if everything as it should be you can freely grasp live or neutral singly without harm.
A problem arises when there is a live/earth or neutral/earth fault condition via faulty equipment or cabling, The other leg of the mains power will then be referenced to earth and if you touch it you will get a shock.
No idea about industrial stuff, but the current regs are such that almost all new domestic circuits are RCD protected. (Technically you can get away without, but you need to do things like protecting the cable behind metal plates, so it's easier to just slap on an RCD.)
Of course, most electrical circuits aren't new, either here or in SA. Did they really make everybody re-wire their houses when that rule came in? How much did the Electricians' Union pay the SA government to get all that extra business?
Pete