From what you are saying, and I need to do more research - thanks for the link:sharpener wrote: ↑Wed Oct 23, 2024 11:41 pm This is a whole other can of worms. If you have a TN-C-S supply you are not supposed to "export" the earth connection to a separate outbuilding because of the risks involved in a broken neutral. Under most circumstances it should have its own earth rod. However if you have a TT supply you can. This may be a better answer anyway if you are planning a battery installation as it covers the island mode situation as well.
Regulation 551.4.3.2.1 of BS 7671 states that, in TN systems, generators operating as a switched alternative to the public supply cannot continue to rely on the distributor’s means of earthing.
Best to look up chapter and verse on the IET web site e.g. for a start https://electrical.theiet.org/wiring-ma ... e-systems/.
You will see your earth rod is then also connected to the incoming grid earth (which is what I think I was also told by a man from WPD, now NG). So not a true TT supply in that case and it also runs the risk of your neighbours' fault currents going through your rod. Don't know if you are then allowed to export the earth to an outbuildng. If not then you can't have the extra earth wire you mention and should interrupt the sheath connections on the SWA too.
You will also see that EV charging point is shown as also requiring an earth rod of its own. But some EVCPs e.g. the zappi have better earth fault detection and don't require this IIRC.
Total minefield IMO.
The solution would appear to be to forget the grid Earth and go to my own earth rods which are kept independent from the grid earth.
I guess this also means that I need to have my consumer units checked to make sure they will work properly with earth rods instead of grid earth.
As you say it seems to be a mine field