Jurghh Posted March 12 Posted March 12 Hi All. I've been a lurker for a while, though never in this forum, but this is my first post. I hope to be able to contribute and help others in the future. So here goes... I'm redoing the kitchen in my BKK condo and I want to add 4 new circuits (sockets & microwave, dishwasher, oven, water heater). The CU is located in the kitchen. I've already chased the walls and installed conduit & back boxes etc. Initially I planned just to add standard MCBs like the ones currently installed but now as I've learnt a little bit more about electrics I think it's better if more or all circuits are RCD protected. Currently only circuit 6 (three down from the right, blue wire) is protected by an RCD. This is the circuit for the existing sockets in the kitchen. So i've got a few questions i'd be very grateful if anyone could help answer: 1. What would be the best way to add RCD protection given the layout of the 3 phase CU? To all circuits or is it less important for others? 2. Could for example all of the existing MCBs be swapped out for 1P RCBOs? The Siemens ones have functional earth wires that need connecting. RCCBs an option? 3. Why did the installers use a 2P RCBO linked to an MCB to add RCD protection to the existing kitchen sockets instead of a single 1P RCBO? 4. Why did the installers break the colour pattern and use black wire instead of red for the bottom left L2 circuit? All of the companies I've had round to do a survey and quotation haven't actually offered a solution in any detail.
Crossy Posted March 13 Posted March 13 Looks like a nice installation to start with 🙂 Is the ground bar actually linked to ground? Those siemens MCBs seem to be normal DIN mount units rather than plug-in 🙂 Single-width RCBOs that will fit are available, although not necessarily cheap. This is possibly why a separate RCD/RCBO was used for the kitchen. Do you have a part number for the Siemens units you found? Sadly, it looks like you will have to extend the white neutral wires for the circuits you need to protect, but such is life. Wire colours? "It's what was in the van guv" I would decide which circuits you need to protect with RCBOs and then look at the costs. Certainly, I would do outside lighting and outlets, water heaters, kitchen outlets except for your fridge/freezer. 1 1 "I don't want to know why you can't. I want to know how you can!"
Jurghh Posted March 13 Author Posted March 13 Thanks for the detailed reply. The ground bar goes into the wall with more heavy duty fixings than say the neutral bar. I loosened off the nut to see what kind of bolt's been used but the whole thing just kept spinning. That was the case for both nuts on the earth bar. There is continuity between the neutral and CPC wires at every receptacle that i've played around with and tested. There's also continuity between the ground bar and the neutral bar in the CU. You're right about the MCBs. They don't clip on to the rail like the RCBO below clips onto its rail. If the screw isn't tightened they won't hold on the rail. I've also noticed that the MCBs appear to fit a bit better the opposite way round (see new photo). There are no load or line markings on the MCBs so I think they can be used either way. Lazada link for the Siemens RCBO 5SU9. https://tinyurl.com/4ehvb246. These have line and load markings. I'm pretty sure they'll fit on the rail where the MCBs are. The bit that's confusing me is the blue neutral wire that they come with. Does that need to be attached at the CU? The MCBs only have a single cable (hot) going to each circuit. Regarding the circuits to add RCD protection to, I've uploaded the CU wiring diagram. The fridge freezer is already on the circuit with the RCBO fitted.
Jurghh Posted March 16 Author Posted March 16 After some more research I think i've found that all the MCBs can be changed to single width RCBOs. They fixed neutral wire attached to the RCBO is 60cm. That wire goes into the neutral bar and the neutrals from the load side (currently in the neutral bar) go into the top of the RCBOs. Those neutral wires will most likely need to be extended with inline Wagos. Regarding the earth bar, i'm still confused by what's going on there. Could it be that the earth and neutral are connected somewhere before my consumer unit?
Crossy Posted March 17 Posted March 17 Earth and neutral are certainly linked somewhere in the installation. In a condo it's likely that you have a TNC-S (or possibly TNS in an older place). Have a look here https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earthing_system If you don't actually see a link then it's going to be elsewhere. If you measure 220-230V between a live and the earth and something close to zero between neutral and earth you're likely good to go. In our old condo all the A/C units were supplied from live and earth!!! They worked just fine although I did move the connections to the right place 🙂 1 "I don't want to know why you can't. I want to know how you can!"
Jurghh Posted March 17 Author Posted March 17 11 hours ago, Crossy said: Earth and neutral are certainly linked somewhere in the installation. In a condo it's likely that you have a TNC-S (or possibly TNS in an older place). Have a look here https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earthing_system If you don't actually see a link then it's going to be elsewhere. If you measure 220-230V between a live and the earth and something close to zero between neutral and earth you're likely good to go. In our old condo all the A/C units were supplied from live and earth!!! They worked just fine although I did move the connections to the right place 🙂 One of the senior technicians from my building came to have a look today. There was a language barrier but we managed to clear a few things up. They invited me into the main electrics room for the floor and showed me the main ground cables. There were 10 cables for the ten apartments (so I had one). He said it was not normal that the main ground cable from that room did not connect directly to the earth bar in my CU. I explained that I was confused because i've owned the place since new and the installation is original. Somewhere between that control room about 10 metres away and my CU the main earth cable is doing something mysterious. Nonetheless it would appear that the circuits are grounded. I tested 231V L to E and 0.45v N to E. They also said I should be fine to swap the MCBs for single width RCBOs. I'm going to order one RCBO first and see if it works. I've uploaded a photo from the control room. There are 10 green earth wires connected.
Jurghh Posted March 17 Author Posted March 17 I think I know what might have happened. Looking at the photo the green wires look quite thin (similar to the thickest green wires in my CU). I should measure the diameter of one of those wires in the control room to see if it matches the thickest wire connected to my earth bar. There are 11 white cables connected to the neutral bar for the 11 circuits installed plus the thick black cable at the top of the bar. There are also 11 green cables connected to the earth bar. The lighting circuit (all lights on one circuit) doesn't have an earth cable. So if the green cable diameters match (as explained above) then the earth bar likely is connected to the building's main earthing. 10 green cables for the circuits plus 1 out to the control room. What do you think?
Popular Post sometimewoodworker Posted March 19 Popular Post Posted March 19 On 3/17/2025 at 8:25 PM, Jurghh said: I'm going to order one RCBO first and see if it works. You should test it in each circuit before buying too many. It is quite possible that you may have a borrowed neutral or 2. That can be very difficult to locate and will either instantly trip an RCBO or trip it when an appliance/light is turned on. For my house it took a competent electriction almost 5 hours of testing to find and eliminate the problem. 2 2
Jurghh Posted March 20 Author Posted March 20 21 hours ago, sometimewoodworker said: You should test it in each circuit before buying too many. It is quite possible that you may have a borrowed neutral or 2. That can be very difficult to locate and will either instantly trip an RCBO or trip it when an appliance/light is turned on. For my house it took a competent electriction almost 5 hours of testing to find and eliminate the problem. That's a good point, thanks. The wiring looks pretty decent so far so i'm hoping they haven't connected any borrowed neutrals. 1
sometimewoodworker Posted March 21 Posted March 21 On 3/20/2025 at 10:23 AM, Jurghh said: That's a good point, thanks. The wiring looks pretty decent so far so i'm hoping they haven't connected any borrowed neutrals. The wiring maybe in perfect condition and a borrowed neutral may only ever be a problem of you try to install an RCBO on a circuit that has one. With whole house RCBO’s it is never a problem, just with individual circuit RCBO’s 1
Jurghh Posted March 22 Author Posted March 22 I swapped a sockets circuit MCB with a 16A RCBO and it worked fine. I tested the RCD function with a socket tester and the circuit tripped like it's supposed to. I guess the next main thing to consider is balancing the load on the three different lines when adding the 4 new circuits. I've got the torque specs for the RCBO but I don't have anything for the neutral bar. The screws are quite soft and don't seem to like much more than 1.5nm. Is that sufficient? 1 1
sometimewoodworker Posted March 23 Posted March 23 10 hours ago, Jurghh said: I've got the torque specs for the RCBO but I don't have anything for the neutral bar. The screws are quite soft and don't seem to like much more than 1.5nm. Is that sufficient? In over 60 years of doing electrical stuff I have never used a torque screwdriver, I have never had one of my connections come loose. The only connection that has ever needed to be tightened was one done by a non electrician in our house. Just try tightening connections on a test socket using gorilla strength. There will be some possible outcomes with a slot headed screw you will break half of the head off with a Philips screw you will round off the recess in the head with any screw you will break off the screw under the head with any screw you will strip the screw thread with any screw you will strip the threads it’s going into. I have experienced all the above, most over 60 years ago the outcomes are partly dependent on the quality of the screws and threaded section as well as your strength. However once you have experienced some or all the above you will develop a feel as to when tight is tight enough. NEVER use an impact driver or any power driver. 1
Jurghh Posted March 24 Author Posted March 24 On 3/23/2025 at 10:30 AM, sometimewoodworker said: In over 60 years of doing electrical stuff I have never used a torque screwdriver, I have never had one of my connections come loose. The only connection that has ever needed to be tightened was one done by a non electrician in our house. Just try tightening connections on a test socket using gorilla strength. There will be some possible outcomes with a slot headed screw you will break half of the head off with a Philips screw you will round off the recess in the head with any screw you will break off the screw under the head with any screw you will strip the screw thread with any screw you will strip the threads it’s going into. I have experienced all the above, most over 60 years ago the outcomes are partly dependent on the quality of the screws and threaded section as well as your strength. However once you have experienced some or all the above you will develop a feel as to when tight is tight enough. NEVER use an impact driver or any power driver. I imagine most folks don't use a torque screwdriver for this. I will admit that 2 or 3nm feels tighter than I thought it would with a screwdriver. I tighten the existing neutral screws to 1.5nm so they were less than that previously and have been fine for a decade. 1.5nm it is.
Jurghh Posted April 4 Author Posted April 4 It seems like the best way to route the blue neutral pigtails is to go along the case just below the main breaker but I will need to secure them to the back of the case. What's the best way to do this? Should I drill holes in the case to thread cables ties through or are there specific parts available to hold the cables?
sometimewoodworker Posted April 4 Posted April 4 11 hours ago, Jurghh said: It seems like the best way to route the blue neutral pigtails is to go along the case just below the main breaker but I will need to secure them to the back of the case. Why? There is no vibration so no need to attach them. Of course OCD could be why 🙂 that said there are cheap cable clips that stick on to surfaces 2
Crossy Posted April 5 Posted April 5 2 hours ago, sometimewoodworker said: that said there are cheap cable clips that stick on to surfaces These chaps should be readily available locally, or get them off Lazada. 1 1 "I don't want to know why you can't. I want to know how you can!"
carlyai Posted April 6 Posted April 6 Just a note on 'all house RCB'. We installed one but everytime the PEA power failed and the genset started the breaker tripped cutting power to all the house. I think it's best to have individual RCB's where you need them. It's probably the way my circuit is wired, but still the problem with whole house protection breaker is you lose the whole house. 1
Popular Post sometimewoodworker Posted April 7 Popular Post Posted April 7 2 hours ago, carlyai said: Just a note on 'all house RCB'. We installed one but everytime the PEA power failed and the genset started the breaker tripped cutting power to all the house. I think it's best to have individual RCB's where you need them. It's probably the way my circuit is wired, but still the problem with whole house protection breaker is you lose the whole house. While individual RCCBs are a requirement in the U.K. and good practice if you can afford them and you have no borrowed neutrals here, whole house are a PEA standard (we all know the compliance that has) your generator tripping yours on startup is a symptom of an incorrect wiring/switchover not a fault of the RCCB 2 1
Crossy Posted April 7 Posted April 7 2 hours ago, carlyai said: It's probably the way my circuit is wired, Does it stay on ok once the genset is running? I'll put money on something awry with the way your N-E bond is being handled. Relative to the transfer-switch where is your N-E bond? "I don't want to know why you can't. I want to know how you can!"
carlyai Posted April 7 Posted April 7 1 hour ago, Crossy said: Does it stay on ok once the genset is running? I'll put money on something awry with the way your N-E bond is being handled. Relative to the transfer-switch where is your N-E bond? The NE bond is in the house CU. Remember the single phase diesel genset supplying the house 3 phases? Bit of neutral current, may be initially not the same as the phase current? Just my guess. I stuck an earth rod in for the genset but still intermittent whole house RCB trip. Disconnected it.
Crossy Posted April 7 Posted April 7 Your N-E bond MUST be on the supply side of your RCD otherwise you may get random tripping. I would try separate N-E bonds for the grid and the genset (I'm assuming your transfer switch does switch the neutral). Could you do a quick sketch of your arrangements (including any rods and N-E bonding)? 1 "I don't want to know why you can't. I want to know how you can!"
Jurghh Posted April 7 Author Posted April 7 All of the existing circuits except the lighting (no ground wire) and the aircons are now RCBO protected. I just need to add in the four new RCBO circuits. As you can see from the photos the rcbos on the right side are slanted. This is because they don't clip onto the rail. Could I put a support underneath to help keep them straight?
carlyai Posted April 7 Posted April 7 1 hour ago, Crossy said: Your N-E bond MUST be on the supply side of your RCD otherwise you may get random tripping. I would try separate N-E bonds for the grid and the genset (I'm assuming your transfer switch does switch the neutral). Could you do a quick sketch of your arrangements (including any rods and N-E bonding)? OK thank you very much. Quick sketch coming sooooonnnn. Will start another thread. 1
Crossy Posted April 7 Posted April 7 1 hour ago, Jurghh said: All of the existing circuits except the lighting (no ground wire) and the aircons are now RCBO protected. I just need to add in the four new RCBO circuits. As you can see from the photos the rcbos on the right side are slanted. This is because they don't clip onto the rail. Could I put a support underneath to help keep them straight? Why don't they clip on?? Could you adjust the rail mounting holes to move the rail so they do clip on? You could probably fashion something or maybe use a DIN end-stop that does clip on but you should really support the beasts properly, you don't want to stress the terminals. 1 "I don't want to know why you can't. I want to know how you can!"
Jurghh Posted April 7 Author Posted April 7 1 hour ago, Crossy said: Why don't they clip on?? Could you adjust the rail mounting holes to move the rail so they do clip on? You could probably fashion something or maybe use a DIN end-stop that does clip on but you should really support the beasts properly, you don't want to stress the terminals. I will have a look if loosening the two screws on the rail allow me to move it outwards a mm or too. The rail isn't a DIN rail though so even the existing MCBs don't clip on (see photo). They do sit against the a little better than the RCBOs. Both MCBs and RCBOs clip on to the DIN rail running horizontally at the bottom. 1
Crossy Posted April 7 Posted April 7 Ah, I see. You might be able to use a DIN end-stop at each end if you can get the type with a locking screw. Let me check what's available. EDIT Something like this may do the trick, it may need a little modification to the side without the screw. 1 "I don't want to know why you can't. I want to know how you can!"
Crossy Posted April 7 Posted April 7 It fits like this onto an actual DIN rail, looking at it you may not even need to modify 🙂 Clip it over and tighten the screws to lock in place. One at each end of the stack and you're gold. 1 "I don't want to know why you can't. I want to know how you can!"
Crossy Posted April 7 Posted April 7 Bag of 10 for 50 Baht plus shipping https://www.lazada.co.th/products/euk-euk2-din-10-i5524156085-s23469848408.html If you have a "proper" electrical shop in your area, you should be able to get there. "I don't want to know why you can't. I want to know how you can!"
Jurghh Posted April 7 Author Posted April 7 1 hour ago, Crossy said: Bag of 10 for 50 Baht plus shipping https://www.lazada.co.th/products/euk-euk2-din-10-i5524156085-s23469848408.html If you have a "proper" electrical shop in your area, you should be able to get there. This could be the answer! Thanks again. I will check if they have them at the local electrics store tomorrow. I'm not sure if i'll be able to fit one at the top but i'll have at least one slot free on the bottom right side and that's obviously the support end. 1 1
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