GB/T 18216.5-2012
AbolishedElectrical safety in low voltage distribution systems up to 1000 V a.c. and 1500 V d.c. - Equipment for testing, measuring or monitoring of protective measures - Part 5: Resistance to earth
交流1000V和直流1500V以下低压配电系统电气安全 防护措施的试验、测量或监控设备 第5部分:对地阻抗
Application Summary AI generated
This standard specifies requirements for equipment used to measure resistance to earth in low voltage distribution systems operating up to 1000 V a.c. or 1500 V d.c. It is applied by electrical engineers and testing personnel to verify the effectiveness of protective earthing measures, ensuring safety against electric shock in residential, commercial, and industrial installations. The standard covers test methods and performance criteria for instruments used during commissioning, periodic inspection, or maintenance of electrical systems.
Related Standards
GB/T 12113-2003
Methods of measurement of touch current and protective conductor current
GB/T 16896.1-2005
Instruments and software used for measurements in high-voltage impulse tests Part 1:requirements for instruments
GB/Z 21192-2007
Space and fixing dimensions for electricity energy meter
GB/Z 26082-2010
Nanomaterials-Measuring method for DC magnetic susceptibility (magnetic moment)
GB/Z 17215.611-2021
Electricity metering data exchange—The DLMS/COSEM suite—Part 11: Template for DLMS/COSEM communication profile standards
GB/Z 17215.651-2022
Electricity metering data exchange—The DLMS/COSEM suite—Part 51:Application layer protocols
GB/Z 17215.669-2022
Electricity metering data exchange—The DLMS/COSEM suite—Part 69:Mapping between the common information model message profiles (IEC 61968-9) and DLMS/COSEM (IEC 62056) data models and protocols
GB/Z 17215.652-2022
Electricity metering data exchange—The DLMS/COSEM suite—Part 52:Communication protocols management distribution line message specification (DLMS) server
Transparency note: The application summary and key sentences on this page were automatically generated by AI from the standard's original text. This content has not been human-verified and should not be used for compliance or regulatory purposes. Always refer to the official standard document from the issuing authority.