ducabi wrote: ↑Thu Oct 06, 2022 6:32 pm
Oldgreybeard wrote: ↑Thu Oct 06, 2022 4:36 pm
Very easy to put one in usually. Needs to be clear of metal pipes and cables underground, but that's usually easy enough in houses built in the past 40 or 50 years, as plastic piping pretty much took over from iron and galvanised steel from around the 1970's onwards. Off the top on my head I think the absolute minimum distance from an earth electrode and any metal underground pipes etc is 2m, or might be 3m, but if your gas and water are coming in via plastic (pretty much a certainty with a 1990's build) then you really only need to worry about physically hitting something critical when driving the electrode in. If in doubt there are ones you can just dig a hole and bury, now. They have the advantage of not needing to go do deep, plus digging the hole gives an indication of anything else that might be in the way.
How can i be 100% sure they are plastic?
Digging a hole myself is what I'm thinking about. What's the required lenght of the rod?
Just check where your water pipe comes in (that will definitely be plastic - they stopped using metal communication pipes in the 70's) and where your gas pipe comes in and try to get the earth electrode as far away from them as you can.
Rod type earth electrodes come in 4ft lengths (1.2m) usually. Unusual to need more than one, but you can screw them together with a threaded coupler if you need to lower the resistance a bit. Here (North Dorset) the normal reading from a single rod is around 20 to 30 ohms, which is very good. Max recommended is 200 ohms, but in reality anything up to 1667 ohms is OK in terms of tripping a 30mA RCD. The 200 ohms recommendation is to allow for changes due to weather, to try and ensure that even if the soils dries right out an electrode that measured 200 ohms would still be OK and under 1667 ohms if very dry.
The usual way to put earth electrodes in now is to dig a hole for the earth pit, fit that and maybe concrete it in place if needed, then drive the earth electrode down through the lower grommet in the pit using an SDS driver. You can put two nuts locked up on the thread at the tope and bang the thing in with a lump hammer, but it's a hell of a lot easier with an SDS driver, and it is like likely that the thread will get damaged, which is very useful if you do need to fit a coupler and drive down a second one.
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