Professional Electrician & Installer February 2022

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TECHNICAL & TRAINING

IS R2 TESTING A DYING ART? Julian Grant, Managing Director of Chauvin Arnoux, ponders why electrical professionals don't undertake more R2 testing.

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n many trades there is a natural tendency toward the long-established methods and techniques learned as apprentices that have been passed down from the generations that went before. This is especially true for electricians. While examples of the trade changing can be seen in some areas, like the wide adoption of ‘push-in’ style connectors over the old choc blocks, or the recent use of torque screwdrivers, very little change is seen in other areas. One such area that we aim to address in this article is inspection and testing, specifically testing the continuity of protective conductors.

Two testing methods There are two methods for testing the continuity of protective conductors: a) the R1+R2 method, where Line and PE are linked, and b) the R2 method using a long wander lead. Most electricians were trained religiously to undertake the R1+R2 method and only shown R2 as an option for testing protective bonding conductors. This practice has become embedded, and many electricians now believe that R1+R2 is the ‘proper’ way to test continuity. The regulations, however, make no such statement.

40 February 2022 PROFESSIONAL ELECTRICIAN

Regulation 643.2.1 of BS7671 simply states that the continuity of conductors and connections to exposed-conductive-parts and extraneous-conductive-parts, if any, shall be verified by a measurement of resistance on protective conductors, including protective bonding conductors. So, there is a requirement to verify the continuity of all protective conductors and their connections to exposed (e.g. metal light fitting) and extraneous (e.g. metal mains water pipe) conductive parts. To achieve this in the majority of cases, it could be argued that the R2 method is much quicker, easier to carry out, requires little to no dismantling of the installation, requires no links to be added at the distribution board or in contactors etc., and if a suitable insulated pole is used, requires little working at height too. Remember testing is for all connections to exposed and extraneous parts – R1+R2 testing at the end of the circuit only, although common, is not acceptable practice. The practice of mass R2 testing has been around for a long time, but is usually only undertaken by specialist inspectors from testing companies who regularly performed EICRs on huge installations like hospitals, factories, and petrochemical refineries.


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