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Cooker isolators and the like

In my formative years electrical, I was brung up that an isolator for a cooker etc must be nearby, say within 2m and obvious as for useage (or clearly marked) as a readily available "rapid use switch" in case of say chip pan fires etc. Rather than having to locate them in cupboards or go to the CU etc to switch off and possibly plunge the whole house into darkness.



Modern folk and their kitchens, it seems some folk have an aversion to them.


Call me old fashioned but my order of preference is 1/ Safety, 2/ Functionalability and 3/ Asthetics.


Any views on this Folks?
Parents
  • With anything in life though.

    The more you try to protect people from their own slillyness the more they tend to rely on that protection rather than avoiding the risks. If you go back thru common practices (not just our regs but motor cars and buildings etc etc ) you might expect that in the past we used to have piles of dead bodies lining the streets!


    The "Thwack" of a 32A MCB tripping does not leave as much impression in the minds of mere mortals as does the "BANG" of a 30A BS3036
Reply
  • With anything in life though.

    The more you try to protect people from their own slillyness the more they tend to rely on that protection rather than avoiding the risks. If you go back thru common practices (not just our regs but motor cars and buildings etc etc ) you might expect that in the past we used to have piles of dead bodies lining the streets!


    The "Thwack" of a 32A MCB tripping does not leave as much impression in the minds of mere mortals as does the "BANG" of a 30A BS3036
Children
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