My memory isn't 100% on the exact regs. However the story is told about a ham radio enthusiast who lived at a TN-C-S house and whose earth rod (that he used for radio purposes) ended up burning his house down because a PEN-fault caused it to become the return path for his entire neighbourhood!sharpener wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2024 9:43 am
I was brought up to think it was a bad idea if not actually prohibited, but it is unavoidable if you follow the guidance in Fig. 3 of the IET article from my link upthread.
I have that arrangement and was actually told by WPD some years ago I was allowed to disconnect their supply earth, but I decided not to do it for reasons that now escape me. It would have been better from the pov of the outbuildings but there was some disadvantage I cannot now remember.
Maybe it was the requirement to protect all TT final circuits with an RCD, as the original PV and (dedicated and labelled) freezer socket are by design on a mini-CU with only a main switch to avoid nuisance tripping if we are away. There was a supply surge which had taken out a few things including the PV inverter, which was fixed under warranty but I lost several weeks' generation in high summer.
Personally I would not want in any event to rely on a contactor guaranteeing earth continuity. The N-E bond relay is perhaps not so critical.
I too bulk at the concept of a contactor being in an earthing system. And I also don't like the idea of engineering a system that is sometimes TN and sometimes TT. But people with "backup generators" do have contactors that switch between the supplier's earth and the rod depending if the property is on-or-off grid.
Just converting the whole thing to TT seems simpler. However (as mentioned above) you need to make sure you are actually TT and not accidentally TN via a neighbour's bonding to a common water/gas pipe or because your rod is too close to something bonded to the supplier's earth...