ᐅ Should the underground cable to the garden be additionally protected?
Created on: 29 Jun 2023 12:55
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Fleckenzwerg
Hello Forum,
We have a 5x2.5mm (approx. 5x0.01 inch²) underground cable running from the house wall to the garden. Before I consider how and where to lay or distribute this cable, I’m wondering if a separate circuit breaker and residual current device (RCD) are useful or even necessary. Actually, “separate” isn’t quite correct since the cable branches off from the living room circuit. It’s not ideal, but that’s how it is now – I didn’t account for this during the house construction. The living room circuit is protected by its own 16A circuit breaker as well as an RCD with a 30mA trip threshold. So if there were an uncontrolled current flow in the garden, only the living room (and a few other areas connected to the same RCD) would lose power. The heating and other rooms are separately protected by different RCDs.
Since the RCD in the living room should quickly detect fault currents in any garden electrical installation, my question is: would a portable RCD device installed outdoors between the supply cable and the garden distribution actually provide any benefit, apart from possibly keeping the living room powered in case of a fault?
From my understanding, a circuit breaker at this point would only be of limited use. With the same trip threshold as the main panel breaker – 16A – there is no guarantee the garden breaker would trip without simultaneously tripping the upstream breaker in the main panel. Following this logic, only a circuit breaker with a lower rating, for example 10A, would make sense here.
In short: does having a downstream RCD and/or circuit breaker in the garden provide any tangible increase in safety?
A related question is where to install these protective devices. Practically, only a weatherproof box suitable for damp locations, mounted at ground level, seems feasible. I’m not sure if such a box exists or is even permitted.
We have a 5x2.5mm (approx. 5x0.01 inch²) underground cable running from the house wall to the garden. Before I consider how and where to lay or distribute this cable, I’m wondering if a separate circuit breaker and residual current device (RCD) are useful or even necessary. Actually, “separate” isn’t quite correct since the cable branches off from the living room circuit. It’s not ideal, but that’s how it is now – I didn’t account for this during the house construction. The living room circuit is protected by its own 16A circuit breaker as well as an RCD with a 30mA trip threshold. So if there were an uncontrolled current flow in the garden, only the living room (and a few other areas connected to the same RCD) would lose power. The heating and other rooms are separately protected by different RCDs.
Since the RCD in the living room should quickly detect fault currents in any garden electrical installation, my question is: would a portable RCD device installed outdoors between the supply cable and the garden distribution actually provide any benefit, apart from possibly keeping the living room powered in case of a fault?
From my understanding, a circuit breaker at this point would only be of limited use. With the same trip threshold as the main panel breaker – 16A – there is no guarantee the garden breaker would trip without simultaneously tripping the upstream breaker in the main panel. Following this logic, only a circuit breaker with a lower rating, for example 10A, would make sense here.
In short: does having a downstream RCD and/or circuit breaker in the garden provide any tangible increase in safety?
A related question is where to install these protective devices. Practically, only a weatherproof box suitable for damp locations, mounted at ground level, seems feasible. I’m not sure if such a box exists or is even permitted.
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RotorMotor2 Jul 2023 10:05So if you plan to implement it as an inline plug, you don’t need a double-pole switch; you can simply unplug it. ;-)