Hi Steve,
Your first thought was correct, You will need to run a dedicated circuit for each area/service of the house.
Running a single circuit for everything in the panel would be a regs deviation for the wiring within the house (314 of Bs7671) but more that that it would cause problems in panel wiring too.
Most 'whole house' panels have multiple circuits, this is the norm. In terms of Isolation there is no requirement to have a single point of isolation for the panel domestically as the house main switch would satisfy this requirement.
There are multiple ways of achieving isolation with a single door isolator if that's your design intent, or alternatively you could run your circuits from the consumer unit to 20A DP switches adjacent to your panel and use one per circuit.
Some people put circuit breakers inside the panels but this is a huge PITA with regards to compliance, Can you test the panel to 16,000 Amps? the usual answer is no and neither can I, and that's just one legal requirement for that route.
The panel you build will in reality be most likely built to BS EN 60204, this means that you design and specify how it works and more importantly, how it fails. there is no 16kA testing requirement here, just don't build a 'consumer unit in it...
If you are a way away from your consumer unit, you could site a small local consumer unit next to your panel?
Good Luck
Martyn
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Loxone English" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to loxone-englis...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/loxone-english/54018e3e-3012-4fb1-a034-81445a3a6a10n%40googlegroups.com.
Hi David,
Looks like from you're email address you are probably an electrician, won't teach you to suck eggs :)
I was not saying the FA panels don't comply, in fact they are very good. one of the biggest misconceptions is that BS7671 Applies to these panels at all.
FA updated their enclosures to be 'compatible' with the 18th
edition when the requirement for all metal enclosure became a
requirement for consumer units and 'similar', that aside they
still needed to meet the enclosure regulations - which they do. In
truth every 'new' requirement of the 18th edition already existed
in other relevant regulation.
FA provide a DoC for their enclosures, but that's the end of that story.
Building regulations and BS7671 do not apply to a panel itself,
as you know both obviously do apply to the installation overall
and fixed wiring.
The panel is a product, this is made up of equipment from many
manufacturers. Once those separate products are assembled together
they become a new product in its own right that requires
certification and UKCA marking (outside of BR or BS7671).
Think of it like a washing machine, you buy your Hotpoint machine from Curry's and you plug it in, I don't know anyone that gives any thought to the certification of the machine when they buy one, it is just implicit through expectation I suppose.
A central heating timer or a nest thermostat may be a better
example though, we connect our wires to these devices without a
second thought for their internal gubbins, they too are products,
obviously fully certified and we wouldn't want to make them
ourselves, well I wouldn't ha!
Future Automation point out in the link you provided that section 522 requires all 'equipment' comply with it's relevant product standard. This is essentially saying you cannot install a piece of electrical equipment (for the purposes of BS7671) which is not certified.
536.4.203 is quite enlightening in relation to panels, especially the notes.
I regularly get told, 'people don't care about the standards or the legal obligations', and that's fine, people do things in their own home for all sorts of reasons, I can guarantee my own home would not get a UKCA tick ha! As a company though it's a different story. Customers have the expectation of things being as they should.
That said, When was the last time you went to any domestic
install and thought 'This is amazing'?
Cheers
Martyn
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/loxone-english/344affc2-d563-40cd-be88-0e605c3f19fdn%40googlegroups.com.
Hi David,
I think I would struggle to argue convincingly that a panel of the nature we are talking is not a product. The raft of regulation is mountainous.
Here is the .Gov

So the question then is, Is there relevant legislation?
Well in the UK the EMC Directive it the Electromagnetic
Compatibility Regulations 2016 and the Electrical
Equipment (safety) regulations 2016, both of which are
indeed current legislation
So a quick look at EESR

I wont bore you with more of that!

512.1.5 is generally related to cables where, for example tri rated, has a higher temperature rating than permitted by the vast majority of terminals.
Basically don't run or fuse a tri rated cable at the current value from the datasheet its actual rating will be less than half that...
Again though the last paragraph and notes are heavily liability laden for some one who installs fixed equipment without manufacturer certification.
You definitely cannot let a panel exceed 70 degrees ambient in any normal installation, that would likely lead to catastrophic failure.
I did notice the statement of 'are designed to house built-in
circuit breakers and we have always recommended
and supplied RCBOs for individual lighting modules'
looks like they are referring to a specific product here, very sloppy wording but in truth their liability is minimal for enclosures. as soon as you put anything in it the law makes you the manufacturer and you responsible for producing new certification. I am not really familiar with their product line up and we don't use their 'Loxone' enclosures, they are generally too small and lack adequate space in the trunking, regs only permit a 55% fill factor for trunking and that's fairly hard to achieve in them.
As a qualified and insured, (Products, PLI, & PII) electrician there is nothing whatsoever to stop you UKCA marking your panels, the law does not require that you have them third party tested or certificated, just that you do actually design, test, certify, & mark them as such, I find the 'hardest' part is the paperwork, current Panel running at 120 pages plus for documentation, it all takes time.
Fully onboard with the last bit, I only post really to get people to think a little about this sort of thing before chucking a load of random bits in a box and at best invalidating their home insurance at worst causing a fire.
Cheers
Martyn
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/loxone-english/602108f4-1595-4c99-ab81-3da722f454a7n%40googlegroups.com.
On 14 Mar 2022, at 12:05, Roger Long <rsl8...@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Martyn
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/loxone-english/1d9b784d-7729-4aa7-900f-87f89b890499n%40googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/loxone-english/6E2BB5E5-86D9-44C8-9633-361FD6AA71C6%40savvyspaces.co.uk.