2007-09-03
In this article, the recommendations for electrical safety and standardization at marinas are discussed. The 16th Edition of the Wiring Regulations does not contain additional requirements for Marinas; but the general requirements apply and the IEE gives guidance in Guidance Note 7.
The 17th edition of BS 7671, due to be published in 2008, includes marinas as
a special location (Section 709) and will include requirements similar to those
discussed below.
A marina is a facility for the mooring of leisure craft and has fixed
wharves, jetties, piers or a pontoon arrangement capable of berthing one or more
leisure craft. A leisure craft is a boat, vessel, yacht, motor launch, houseboat
or other floating craft used exclusively for sport or leisure and a houseboat is
a floating decked structure which is designed or adapted for use as a place of
permanent residence often kept in one place on inland water.
An electrical installation at a marina consists of the equipment which
supplies the leisure craft or houseboat and the installation is subject to
additional recommendations because of electrical safety issues and in order to
provide for standardisation of power facilities.
The recommendations do not apply to the parts of the electrical installations
in offices, workshops, leisure accommodation etc. which form part of the marina
complex, to the supply of houseboats if they are directly supplied from the
public network, or to the internal electrical installations of leisure craft or
houseboats. Additional requirements are considered necessary because of
increased electric shock risks associated with a wet environment, reduction in
contact resistance and contact with earth potential.
In addition, the environment of a marina is harsh for electrical equipment.
The water, salt, and movement of structures accelerate deterioration of the
installation. The presence of salt water, dissimilar metals and a potential for
leakage currents increases the rate of corrosion. There is a real possibility of
electrical equipment being splashed or even submerged. Flammable fuel may be
present.
A risk associated with an electrical supply to a craft at a marina includes
the possibility of an open circuit fault of the PEN conductor were a PME supply
to be used. This would raise the potential of all metalwork (including that of
the craft, if connected) to a dangerous level above true earth and hence the
connection of a neutral conductor to the metal body of a boat or caravan is
specifically prohibited in legislation (Electricity Safety, Quality and
Continuity Regulations (ESQCR) Regulation 9(4)).
Further risks include the inability to establish an equipotential zone
external to the craft, the possible loss of earthing due to long supply cable
runs, connecting devices exposed to weather and flexible cord connections liable
to mechanical damage.
To read full article please see attachment...
(Originally published in Wiring Matters, by John Ware)
| Related links |
IEE |
|
Related contacts
|
The Institution of Engineering and Technology
Savoy Place
London
WC2R 0BL
UK
Tel: +44 (0)20 7240 1871
Fax: +44 (0)20 7240 7735 |
Email IET
|
| For latest electrical industry news, register for Voltimum's free newsletter. |
|
|
Source: IET |