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Subject Topic: A Reminder About Camping Leads
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19/8/2012 at 3:48pm
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Quote: Originally posted by jonnie45 on 18/8/2012
Quote: Originally posted by evenstephen on 18/8/2012Forgive me for asking but was the gentleman concerned British? I only ask because I've never seen anyone on British sites use such an arrangement in all my years of camping. We all use the proper EHU cable. And on my one tour of Denmark all the sites had exactly the same sort of site outlet to plug into that we use in Britain so there was no need to use any sort of connector. So whilst it's probably all good advice I'm a bit baffled.



Hi

I think the primary reasons are....

To save money - perhaps a B&Q lead is cheaper than a proper camping lead.

Flexibility

It may be as simple as thats what they have to hand.

QUOTE: We all use the proper EHU cable.

I have heard UK campers before claim that they ALL use the correct gear - is it really true?

I suspect what may be going on here is more along the lines that if you ask a person whether there have been many house fires in his town recently he may recall that he has not seen any and say none - if you ask a fireman you may get a different answer!

Hope I am not being rude in the above but we get Danes and Germans with inappropriate leads or configurations and these are socities which are pretty hot on rules and standards, I just find it a bit odd that all British campers would be otherwise.

Jon












You're obviously speaking from a position of knowledge and I can't argue with that. Perhaps becasue I've only camped on Club sites in Britain for the past 25 years I haven't come across some of the stupid electrical arrangements you talk of. Over the years I have had a good nose around the sites and honestly I have never spotted anything other than what appears to be proper EHU cables, not that I've been specifically looking for this. I've certainly never seen the arrangement you mention of a short lead from the bollard connected to a domestic socket. I genuinely am baffled why anyone would this, especially when a proper EHU cable is only a few pounds - just had a quick look at Towsure 10m cable £19.95 25m cable £28.50 which is a drop in the ocean compared with what they must have spent on all the rest of the equipment and it's the equivalent of only one or two nights camping fee. I am genuinely shocked people do this so I suppose that makes me rather naive.


19/8/2012 at 8:22pm
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Just read this to hubs and he said we are complying

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No longer a camping virgin!
July 2012 - Newquay, Cornwall
Aug 2012 - Dawlish, Devon
July 2013 - North Devon
Aug 2014 - Sanford park
Aug 2016 - Hendra


19/8/2012 at 8:39pm
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Quote: Originally posted by saxo1 on 18/8/2012

The problem with trying to discriminate purely using trip current ratings is if the leakage current of the downstream RCD is in excess of it's rating then the upstream RCD will detect the same leakage current. i.e. if the leakage were 100 mA then a 10 mA and a 30 mA RCD will both detect the leakage and both will trip.

Saxo1

 





Hi Saxo

Can you see any way forwards with Mojo's suggestion that makes sense to you? Its attractive for several reasons.

One day someone will invent the perfect system, discrimination in favour of the post instead of the technic room and option to send my pager a little alert giving pitch number - one can dream on

Thanks
Jon


19/8/2012 at 9:33pm
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I can only speak for the specifications in the U.K. but I suspect that the majority of RCDs are manufactured to the same tolerances.

The UK requirements for RCDs is that they should operate between 50% and 100% of their rated tripping current,most 30 mA RCDs operate at between 18 mA and 23 mA.You will see that if a 10 mA RCD is manufactured to the same standard its tripping current could possibly be as low as 5 mA,I think this would be far too low for the harsh conditions experienced on a campsite and would lead to nuisance tripping.A 30 mA RCD is considered to be the safest and least troublesome for personal protection.

To ensure discrimination a factor of three is required for the upstream RCD so a 30 mA RCD would need a 90mA RCD(a 100mA unit is normally used) upstream and it would also need to be a type C time delayed.It doesn't have to be  time delayed  but if you want to guarantee discrimination it needs to be.

If all your pitches have individual 30 mA RCDs then under the regs in the UK a 100mA time delayed unit is acceptable upstream,this then copes with the discrimination problem and also the combined earth leakage situation caused by capacitance and imperfect insulation from the total no of units connected.

As all the downstream RCDs offer the required personal protection then the function of the upstream RCD is mainly equipment protection, fire prevention being the primary one, but it will still offer a reduced level of shock protection.

The above applies to the UK it may be different for mainland Europe

Saxo1



20/8/2012 at 7:33am
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Quote: Originally posted by saxo1 on 19/8/2012

I can only speak for the specifications in the U.K. but I suspect that the majority of RCDs are manufactured to the same tolerances.

The UK requirements for RCDs is that they should operate between 50% and 100% of their rated tripping current,most 30 mA RCDs operate at between 18 mA and 23 mA.You will see that if a 10 mA RCD is manufactured to the same standard its tripping current could possibly be as low as 5 mA,I think this would be far too low for the harsh conditions experienced on a campsite and would lead to nuisance tripping.A 30 mA RCD is considered to be the safest and least troublesome for personal protection.

To ensure discrimination a factor of three is required for the upstream RCD so a 30 mA RCD would need a 90mA RCD(a 100mA unit is normally used) upstream and it would also need to be a type C time delayed.It doesn't have to be  time delayed  but if you want to guarantee discrimination it needs to be.

If all your pitches have individual 30 mA RCDs then under the regs in the UK a 100mA time delayed unit is acceptable upstream,this then copes with the discrimination problem and also the combined earth leakage situation caused by capacitance and imperfect insulation from the total no of units connected.

As all the downstream RCDs offer the required personal protection then the function of the upstream RCD is mainly equipment protection, fire prevention being the primary one, but it will still offer a reduced level of shock protection.

The above applies to the UK it may be different for mainland Europe

Saxo1





Thanks very much for going to the trouble of writing that saxo - in particular the info about rating and overlapping ranges sheds light.

I appreciate it!

Thanks

Jon




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20/8/2012 at 12:17pm
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Quote: Originally posted by millermicm on 18/8/2012
And Always unwind the cable fully to avoid heat building up on the reel and melting the plastic covering.




We were on a CC site last week and I was surprised to see the number of people using cables tightly wound on the reel. Hopefully, they were only using low power appliances!


20/8/2012 at 10:45pm
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Hi Jon,

Just read through your thread and was wondering what the intended purpose of the central (feeding 20 points) 30mA RCD was?

Given that each socket is individually protected by its own RCD (as required by the latest regs) the upstream 30mA RCD serves no real purpose and is indeed likely to suffer from nuisance trips given the lack of discrimination as discussed.

The wiring between your central distribution point and each pitch outlet should be installed and physically protected (depth or height below/above ground, mechanical protection, etc) such that no additional protection is required to guard against electrocution. As Saxo suggests, a time-delayed 100mA (possibly even higher as that is only 5mA leakage per pitch) would be your best belt-and-braces option in the distribution point. Overcurrent protection is still required to protect the wiring to each outlet but that is a separate issue.

It should be borne in mind that so-called nuisance trips could themselves be a safety hazard should an unsuspecting camper be plunged into darkness as a result of the action of another camper e.g. from trips/falls, scalding, etc and so mitigation of this risk should have been designed in at the outset. It is on this basis that, for redential properties, 'whole-house' RCDs are no longer permitted by the regs because more people were being killed/injured from falls down stairways in the dark than would otherwise be caused by fixed wiring faults that the RCD was intended to protect!

Hopefully this goes without saying but you should seek the advice of a qualified electrician rather than taking anything said here as necessarily valid. Aside from anything there are many other factors, such as the type of supply and distribution earthing, that will also have an influence over exactly what protection is required.

Mathew



Post last edited on 20/08/2012 23:25:15


21/8/2012 at 8:37am
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Quote: Originally posted by mjnewton on 20/8/2012Hi Jon,Just read through your thread and was wondering what the intended purpose of the central (feeding 20 points) 30mA RCD was?
Given that each socket is individually protected by its own RCD (as required by the latest regs) the upstream 30mA RCD serves no real purpose and is indeed likely to suffer from nuisance trips given the lack of discrimination as discussed.

The wiring between your central distribution point and each pitch outlet should be installed and physically protected (depth or height below/above ground, mechanical protection, etc) such that no additional protection is required to guard against electrocution. As Saxo suggests, a time-delayed 100mA (possibly even higher as that is only 5mA leakage per pitch) would be your best belt-and-braces option in the distribution point. Overcurrent protection is still required to protect the wiring to each outlet but that is a separate issue.

It should be borne in mind that so-called nuisance trips could themselves be a safety hazard should an unsuspecting camper be plunged into darkness as a result of the action of another camper e.g. from trips/falls, scalding, etc and so mitigation of this risk should have been designed in at the outset. It is on this basis that, for redential properties, 'whole-house' RCDs are no longer permitted by the regs because more people were being killed/injured from falls down stairways in the dark than would otherwise be caused by fixed wiring faults that the RCD was intended to protect!

Hopefully this goes without saying but you should seek the advice of a qualified electrician rather than taking anything said here as necessarily valid. Aside from anything there are many other factors, such as the type of supply and distribution earthing, that will also have an influence over exactly what protection is required.

Mathew

Post last edited on 20/08/2012 23:25:15



As far as I understand it the RCD at the pitch may not protect the operator digging or working upstream. Either way it is standard design and as far as I am aware fully mandatory.

Campsite regs also require us to have adequate lighting and we have illumination throughout the campsite.

We do not suffer many nuisance trips, I have said in previous posts that almost all of our trips are repeatable and associated with one item of equipment which can then be demonstrated to be able to trip a 30mA RCD when it is the only thing on the circuit ( I mentioned we unplug everyone as part of our investigative procedure ). So despite repeated theoretical claims the observed behaviour is that actually a 30mA RCD can serve a modest number of campers without nuisance trips.

You are right about qualified advice but I have read professional forums on the matter and you might be surprised to know that many professionals seem to get puzzled on series RCD issues and often ask each other questions of this nature.

I would of course take any information offered by Mojo and Saxo and pass it by a professional but I have to say that so far I have been very impressed by the knowledge displayed by these two. Advice is not dangerous if it is subsequently verfied and confirmed by professionals and I have not necessarily obtained the same clarity and illumination talking to professionals. I tend to find I get best results from pros when I am armed with a fairly full understanding of the issues myself.

I assure you that standards/regs that determine what I can or cannot do in Denmark are very high and anything I do is subject to regular inspection.

Thanks Jon

PS As far as I have been able to assertain I am most likely not allowed 100mA upstream, actually seems that the English regs are a bit loose here as 100mA is commonly quoted in the online sources I have consulted as being the agreed lethal threshold ( varies of course )

I noted my comments on nuisance trips dont properly take into account that the other users on the same leg do actually experienced a nuisance trip because it would not have happend to them if a single RCD so your comment has validity as far as the others are concerned. A valid trip can still be a nuisance trip - depends not only on the event but on the collateral consequence, I am confusing the issue by failing to differentiate between nuisance trip and shall we say "justified trip".










Post last edited on 21/08/2012 09:56:48

Post last edited on 21/08/2012 10:02:40

Post last edited on 21/08/2012 10:05:00


21/8/2012 at 12:04pm
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Quote: Originally posted by evenstephen on 18/8/2012
Forgive me for asking but was the gentleman concerned British? I only ask because I've never seen anyone on British sites use such an arrangement in all my years of camping. We all use the proper EHU cable. And on my one tour of Denmark all the sites had exactly the same sort of site outlet to plug into that we use in Britain so there was no need to use any sort of connector. So whilst it's probably all good advice I'm a bit baffled.



With the amount of muppets that come on here asking if their deathly cheap EHU cable bought off ebay is safe, when it's obviously not, I wouldn't be surprised at what some people will use



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21/8/2012 at 7:32pm
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Quote: Originally posted by jonnie45 on 21/8/2012
I assure you that standards/regs that determine what I can or cannot do in Denmark are very high and anything I do is subject to regular inspection.


I hadn't picked up on the fact you were in Denmark! (I do recall reading its mention but didn't put two and two together). All of this advice could be largely redundant as your regulations could well be very to different to those in the UK.

Quote: As far as I understand it the RCD at the pitch may not protect the operator digging or working upstream.


That is correct - an RCD only protects what is downstream of it. However, in the UK at least, operator digging protection should be achieved by having the supply cable adequate protected, marked and buried at least 0.6m below the ground (or 6m above the ground). Needless to say I don't have the foggiest what stipulations Denmark mandate!

Mathew




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