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BS 7671 Amendment 4: Server Room Earthing Requirements

Amendment 4Section 545 — ICT Functional EarthingServer Rooms

Server rooms and communications rooms in commercial buildings present a scaled-down version of the data centre earthing challenge. Section 545 in Amendment 4 applies equally to these smaller facilities, but the implementation differs significantly from purpose-built data centres.

The key distinction is that server rooms typically exist within a building whose earthing system was designed purely for protective purposes. Section 545 requires that the functional earthing for ICT equipment is integrated with — but does not compromise — the existing protective earthing arrangement. In practice, this means installing a dedicated functional earth bar in the server room, connected to the building's main earthing terminal by a conductor sized per Section 545, not the building's general supplementary bonding requirements.

Rack bonding is often the weakest point in server room earthing. Section 545 requires that each rack frame is bonded to the functional earth bar with a conductor of at least 16 mm² copper (or equivalent). The connection must be made using a dedicated bonding terminal, not via the rack mounting bolts or paint-coated structural members. This is a common deficiency found during inspection — painted surfaces provide intermittent or high-impedance connections that cause EMC issues and unreliable fault current paths.

Cable tray and containment bonding in server rooms must provide continuity across joints. Section 545 specifies that cable tray joints used as part of the functional earth mesh must have a DC resistance not exceeding 5 milliohms per joint. Standard cable tray clamp joints typically achieve this, but nylon-insert lock nuts or painted surfaces can push resistance above the limit.

For mixed-use buildings, the server room functional earth must not introduce earth loops that cause circulating currents in the building's protective earth system. Section 545 provides guidance on single-point versus multiple-point bonding strategies, with single-point bonding recommended for server rooms below 50 m² floor area.

ECalPro's Earthing Calculator computes conductor sizing for the functional earth bar feed, rack bonding requirements, and verifies that the server room earthing integrates correctly with the building's protective earthing system.

What Changed

AspectBefore Amendment 4After Amendment 4
Functional earth barNo BS 7671 requirement for dedicated ICT earth bar in server roomsSection 545 requires dedicated functional earth bar connected to MET by appropriately sized conductor
Rack bondingGeneral supplementary bonding rules appliedMinimum 16 mm² Cu per rack, dedicated terminal required — paint/bolt contacts not acceptable
Cable tray jointsNo specific resistance requirement for tray jointsMaximum 5 milliohms DC resistance per joint when tray forms part of functional earth mesh

Compliance Steps

  1. 1
    Install dedicated functional earth bar in the server room connected to building MET per Section 545
  2. 2
    Bond each rack frame with minimum 16 mm² copper conductor to dedicated bonding terminal
  3. 3
    Verify cable tray joint resistance does not exceed 5 milliohms where tray forms functional earth mesh
  4. 4
    Select single-point or multiple-point bonding strategy based on room size (single-point for under 50 m²)
  5. 5
    Document functional earth system and verify integration with building protective earthing using ECalPro

Calculate with Amendment 4 Requirements

ECalPro's calculators are updated for BS 7671 Amendment 4. Verify your server rooms designs against the latest requirements.

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Frequently Asked Questions

No. Section 545 requires a dedicated functional earth bar in the server room with rack bonds of at least 16 mm² copper to dedicated terminals. Building supplementary bonding serves a different purpose and is typically undersized for functional earthing.

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