Mr. Che said:
If earthing at the up-stream is chosen, the down-stream armour is isolated from earth. This can be done with the armour stop and taped up say 30mm away from the gland.
Grounding at the supply end is one standard practice under the Canadian code.
In the event that connecting the armours together by grounding or some other means creats objectionable circulating currents, insulating the armours at the load end is one accepted mitigation practice.
Other acceptable means are;
1. De-rating the cable ampacity to allow for the added heating of the cable by the circulating currents.
2. Transposing the armours at 1/3 points or multiples there-of so that the induced voltages cancel.
Note: When the armour is insulated at the load end, a separate grounding conductor must be used to ground field equipment.
Personal note to Che Kuan Yau.
Dear sir. I have called you Mr. Che as an indication of respect.
I spent many years in Latin America and in that culture Mr. Che would be appropriate.
While I don't always agree with you I do respect your technical knowledge.
Our disagreements are mostly based on different codes and different local practices.
More interesting than serious.
If you find my use of Mr Che to be inappropriate, please inform me of your preference.
Thank you.
Bill
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Ohm's law
Not just a good idea;
It's the LAW!