GEB
Active Member
None but I have not suggested that any do - as I indicated my comments applied to installations to BS 7671 - what point are you making?
Which of those 5 applies to a simple conduit ?
There are in fact five clauses to 11.3 a to e - each gives a way of complying.
B applies to ducting or trunking neither of which meet the definition of conduit.
What hasn't been mentioned here is the possibility of an AC fault voltage entering the water surrounding the boat via a bonding circuit or other metal fitting, from another onboard fault, e.g 240v short to the DC or bonding circuit, not otherwise grounded to earth via the normal PE conductor.
This is particularly lethal to swimmers / fallers in in fresh water as the AC current will tend to stratify at the surface, and being relatively salty the human body becomes a preferential conductive path, as the voltage seeks to flow somewhere and remarkably little current will induce paralysis, and consequent drowning, rather than elecric shock causing the death.
I understood this to be the major reason for connection of the bonding circuit to DC neg to shore earth, possibly via a GI if preferred.
An AC current leakage can also play havoc with anodes, causing massive metal loss in a relatively short period of time.
None but I have not suggested that any do - as I indicated my comments applied to installations to BS 7671 - what point are you making?
David said, " extra low voltage DC and low voltage AC must not be run in the same conduit, can be seperated by ladders or 100mm spacing if simply clipped, the exception is if there is an outer braid to the sheath that is of at least the same cross section as the PE. That is of course assuming you wish to comply with 13297"
You said, "There are in fact five clauses to 11.3 a to e - each gives a way of complying."
When I ask which applies you say. None
Which is it 5 or none ?
Inspired by recent threads, but not wanting to divert them.
It's often suggested that the shore power earth ought to be connected to the DC negative. Also that one or both of these ought to be connected to the water. As far as I know (and I'm going to check with a multimeter next weekend) neither of these connections is present on Ariam.
The shore power system runs a charger, an immersion heater, and a couple of sockets. It has one RCD, an overall MCB, and an additional MCB for each circuit. The shore earth is connected to the 240v equipment, but not anything else.
The DC system runs throughout the boat, but not to anything in contact with the water. The engine block is connected to DC negative, but is isolated from the saildrive. The wire-reinforced hose has been carefully trimmed so that it doesn't provide a rogue electrical connection.
There is no hull anode, bonding of seacocks, or other extraneous magic cabling.
What risk am I theoretically running by not connecting things together?
Pete