Electrical Safety on Site: PAT Testing, 110V Supplies & Isolation Procedures

Quick Answer: All portable electrical equipment used on construction sites should be 110V centre-tapped-to-earth (CTE) supplied by an isolating transformer, or alternatively battery-powered or 230V tools protected by a 30mA RCD. PAT testing intervals for site tools are typically 3 months under HSE guidance. Isolation before working on any electrical system must follow a formal safe isolation procedure per GS38 and BS 7671.

Summary

Electrical accidents are among the leading causes of workplace fatalities in the UK construction industry. The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) reports that contact with overhead lines, working on live equipment, and using poorly maintained tools are the three primary electrical hazards on site. Despite this, electrical safety is one of the most routinely overlooked areas of site management among small-to-medium contractors.

The regulatory framework is clear: the Electricity at Work Regulations 1989 (EAW Regs) impose duties on both employers and employees to ensure electrical systems are safe and properly maintained. For portable equipment specifically, the HSE guidance document HSG107 and British Standard BS EN 50191 provide the framework for site supply systems. The IET Code of Practice for In-service Inspection and Testing of Electrical Equipment (4th edition) governs PAT testing frequency and procedures.

The most misunderstood aspect of site electrical safety is the relationship between voltage reduction (110V CTE) and RCD protection. These are not interchangeable — they address different risks. 110V CTE reduces the shock voltage to a maximum of 55V to earth, which is survivable in most circumstances. An RCD detects earth faults and disconnects the supply quickly, but operates at 230V. Best practice is to use 110V CTE supplies wherever practicable and add RCD protection as an additional layer of defence.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Equipment Type Preferred Supply PAT Interval (Site) PAT Interval (Office/Low Risk)
Angle grinder 110V CTE 3 months N/A
SDS drill 110V CTE 3 months N/A
Circular saw 110V CTE 3 months N/A
Extension leads 110V CTE or 230V+RCD 3 months 12 months
Site lighting 110V CTE or 230V+RCD 3 months N/A
Battery charger 110V CTE preferred 3 months 12 months
Laptop/tablet 230V (low risk) Not required 4 years
Transformer (110V) 230V input, inspect output 3 months N/A
Portable generator Self-contained; RCD fitted 3 months N/A

Detailed Guidance

110V Centre-Tapped-to-Earth Supplies

A 110V CTE transformer has its secondary winding centre-tapped and that centre point connected to earth. This means neither output terminal is more than 55V above earth potential. In the event of a fault, the maximum voltage a person can receive is 55V — significantly below the 230V that can cause cardiac arrest.

The transformer itself must be sited safely, protected from damage, and rated for the connected load. Typical site transformers are 2kVA, 3.3kVA, or 5kVA. Multiple tools running simultaneously require either a larger transformer or multiple units. The output sockets use blue 110V industrial plugs (IEC 60309, 4h keying) which cannot accidentally be plugged into 230V supplies.

Yellow 110V connectors (IEC 60309, 4h) are used for 110V site supplies specifically to differentiate them from 230V blue industrial (6h) or 16A blue (6h) connectors. This colour coding is part of the IEC 60309 system and is recognised across European construction sites.

PAT Testing — What It Is and What It Covers

Portable Appliance Testing is not a legal requirement in itself — the legal requirement under EAW Reg 4 is to maintain electrical equipment in a safe condition. PAT testing is one way of demonstrating compliance. The IET Code of Practice provides a risk-based approach to testing intervals.

A PAT test typically comprises:

  1. Visual inspection — check for damage to cable, plug, casing, strain relief
  2. Earth continuity test — confirms the earth conductor is intact (< 0.1Ω for Class I equipment)
  3. Insulation resistance test — 500V DC applied between live conductors and earth; must exceed 1MΩ
  4. Functional check — the appliance operates correctly

Class II (double-insulated) tools marked with the double-square symbol do not require an earth continuity test, only insulation resistance and visual check.

PAT test records must be kept. The label on the tool is not the record — a written or electronic log is required. The label provides a visible date for site supervisors to check at a glance.

Safe Isolation Procedure

Isolation before working on an electrical circuit is not optional — EAW Regulations 1989, Regulation 13 requires that electrical systems be made dead before work begins, unless live working is strictly necessary and suitable precautions are in place. Live working on domestic supplies is almost never justified.

Correct safe isolation procedure:

1. IDENTIFY the circuit to be worked on
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2. SWITCH OFF at the MCB or isolator
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3. LOCK OFF using a lockout device and personal padlock
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4. PROVE the voltage indicator is working — test on a KNOWN LIVE supply
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5. TEST the isolated circuit — verify it is DEAD at the point of work
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6. PROVE the voltage indicator STILL works on a known live supply
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7. APPLY "DANGER — DO NOT SWITCH ON" warning notice
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8. Begin work

Steps 4 and 6 (proving the indicator before and after) are critical and often skipped. A voltage indicator can fail between tests. By proving it works before and after, you confirm your "dead" reading was genuine and not a failed instrument.

GS38 compliant test leads must have:

Isolation for Three-Phase Supplies

Three-phase isolation requires all four conductors (L1, L2, L3, N) to be confirmed dead at the point of work. The neutral conductor in a three-phase system can carry significant current even when all line MCBs are off — due to unbalanced loads. Always test neutral to earth before assuming it is safe to handle.

Working Near Overhead Lines

Overhead power lines kill and seriously injure workers every year. Most incidents involve cranes, tippers, or scaffolding poles being raised into lines. The HSE publication "Avoiding Danger from Overhead Power Lines" (GS6) provides the definitive guidance.

Key rules:

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need 110V tools if I'm only doing a small job?

The legal position is clear: under EAW Reg 4, you must maintain equipment to prevent danger. The HSE's preferred approach for construction sites is 110V CTE. However, for very short-duration domestic work (e.g., a solo electrician fitting a socket), 230V tools with 30mA RCD protection are acceptable if the risk assessment supports it. For any multi-trade site with multiple workers, 110V should be the default.

Can I do my own PAT testing?

Yes, provided you are competent to do so. The IET Code of Practice does not require a specific qualification — it requires knowledge, experience, and the right equipment. In practice, many contractors use specialist PAT testing companies for their annual or quarterly schedules. Whichever approach you choose, keep a written record of tests and results.

What is the difference between an RCD and an RCBO?

An RCD (Residual Current Device) detects imbalance between line and neutral current, which indicates a leakage fault. An RCBO combines RCD protection with an MCB (overcurrent protection) in a single device. On site, a 30mA RCD socket adapter provides personal protection against shock; a 300mA RCD at the distribution board provides fire protection. They serve different functions.

What happens if someone switches the supply back on while I'm working?

This is why lock-off is essential. A verbal agreement or a piece of tape over a switch is not adequate. A lock means that only the person holding the key can restore the supply. On sites with multiple workers, a "hasp" (multi-lock device) allows multiple padlocks from different workers — the supply cannot be restored until all padlocks are removed.

Is it legal to work live at 230V?

Under EAW Regulation 14, live working is only permitted where it is unreasonable to make dead, or where the nature of the work requires the circuit to be live. Domestic fault-finding with a voltage indicator is legitimate live working provided precautions are in place. Actually replacing or connecting conductors live at 230V is almost never justified and is an HSE enforcement priority.

Regulations & Standards