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On 2005-02-26 12:38:34 +1100, Sir Spamalot said:
On Fri, 25 Feb 2005 22:27:31 GMT, John Proctor wrote: On 2005-02-25 12:44:20 +1100, chuck said: Hello Eric, Thanks for clarifying. I believe you are correct. You are talking about high-resistance onboard leakages that generate currents too small to be detected by the GFI circuit or the breakers. The isolator diodes would probably not conduct under those circumstances and a capacitor would help. UL requires the GFI to trip at a 5 ma unbalance, so 24,000 ohms of leakage would trip it. Actually, the isolator diodes would probably pass 5 ma in that circuit without a capacitor. The capacitor would be necessary when the leakage resistance was in the megohms and the currents in the microamps. Would rather not have that stuff flowing through my ground connections through the water to adjacent boats, even at those low current levels. This underscores the importance of making sure you don't have dangerous leakages onboard in the first place. Easy enough to check, but how many regularly test their GFIs? We sure agree on the isolation transformer, too. Thanks again, Eric. Chuck Chuck, I am puzzled by your UL 5 ma rating. Here in Australia we have basically two ratings. The first is for most domestic installations an is 30 ma. The second is for hazerdous locations including hospitals where the rating is 10 ma. There are other higher rating RCD (Residual Current Devices) which are used in industrial contexts (eg 60 ma) but the majority of installations are either 30 ma. or 10 ma. BTW I am an EE as well as a licensed Electrical Contractor. Chuck, Now **I** am puzzled by the Australian ratings, especially since my sister lives "across the pond" in NZ. 30ma has been known to kill, hence I question the 30ma "domestic installation" rating. And you guys are on 240V, correct? Are we discussing semantics here? In the US, a GFI (120V) is supposed to protect the unknowing public from faults that could channel more than 5ma through the body. UL/CSA/others test to that 5ma specification. SS PS: Me too on the EE business. Curiouser and curiouser... In Australia we have generally what is called a multiply earthed neutral system (MEN). There are other types of distributution systems used in remote areas but MEN system is found in all urban areas. In this system n+1 service conductors (where n = number of phases) are brought into the consumer's premises although if available on the distributiuon system 3 phase power is much easier to obtain here than in NA (I originally came from Canada). This phase active and netral in a single phase supply is the normal residential. The neutral is boded to earth at each consumer switchboard and the earth is bonded to a ground system which is normally a grounding rod of reasonable size. Some allowances are made for installations where a ground rod is not practical or where it cannot be of sufficient size. It has not been acceptable to ground to utility services (gas or water) for some number of years due to lack of guaranteed continuity (gas reticulation is via plastic pipes and water meters har generally non metalic internally). I have generally seen in the literature that 60 ma is generally considered the level at which statistically fibrillation is almost guaranteed when the current passes through the chest cavity. Some of the references given seem to indicate much lower levels. However when standards are set they must take into account the statistical nature of some of the effects they are trying to deal with. Hence I think the 30 ma residential rating here in Australia. The AS/NZS 3000:2000 Wiring Rules specifies an maximum RCD rating of 30 ma for residential circuits and I don't believe there are any addendums which mandate a lower maximum. As I indicated in my previous post the 10 ma level is required in hospitals or other high risk application areas. However you need to balance emi filtering requirements with leakage levels so that you don't get nuisance tripping. I don't know about New Zealand but given the nature of trans-Tasman standards activities I would be surprised if their wiring rules were significantly different from ours. After all we use the same wiring rules! In residential installations an RCD (residual current device) is required on general purpose outlets and lighting circuits but does not need to be applied to direct connection appliances like cooktops or stoves. However practice has evolved so that 'safety switches' (RCDs) are placed on the whole installation (for older installations) as these are easier to wire into old and cramped switchboards. New installations segregate the power, lighting and direct connected appliances and have an RCD on the appropriate circuits. Some contractors also will provide unprotected circuits for essential circuits (refrigerators, freezers etc.) to prevent food spoilage from nuisance tripping where the outlet is set up for fixed use. In the case of marinas there is usually a 16A branch circuit protected by a 30 ma RCD supplying shore power to the vessel. Unfortuanately, I don't have any experience with larger vessels where 3 phase power from shore is delivered but I would expect the situaltion to be similar with n+1+1 conductors being delivered to the boat (where n = number of phases and the extra +1 is the earth). It is mandatory that earth and neutral be kept separate on the vessel. Installations where there are changeover facilities to a genset require the earth and neutral to be bonded only when the genset is the power source. Sorry about the length but that is generally how things work downunder. -- Regards, John Proctor VK3JP, VKV6789 S/V Chagall |
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