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Overloaded fused spur, opinion please

I was an industrial electrician and have now come across a domestic wiring issue where nothing appeared wrong with the installation.  Those with more experience will have probably have come across this many times.


The kitchen is supplied by a 2.5mm T&E ring fed from a B32 circuit breaker.  On this ring there is a 13A fused switched spur above the worktop feeding a double socket underneath via 2.5 T&E.  There is a washing machine and a dishwasher plugged into this double socket.  Every so often, I assume when both appliances are heating at the same time, the 13A fuse in the spur blows.  The cable supplying this double socket is in the wall so the current-carrying capacity appears to be 18.5A so this was probably being overloaded as well.


I understand that in the regs diversity covers some aspects of this situation, but this specific situation must occur often surely?  The switched spur gives the ability to switch off the appliance easily without having to pull it out in order to reach the switch, so is surely desirable?


In this case I have installed a second switched fused spur feeding a single socket and converted the other to a single.


Is this a common problem in kitchens?
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  • Former Community Member
    0 Former Community Member
    Your point, I'm guessing, is that 773's are not always suitable for all circuits with 2.5 sq mm cables ... but that still doesn't answer RFC's.


    Yes, I wanted to illustrate that capacity doesn't always equate to CCC (sorry, current carrying capacity)


    Or that the use of a 2 mm2 neutral tail on a RCBO can indeed carry say 32 A but that its temperature may well be 105 C, when in a DB next to other wiring only rated at 70 C ........ 522.2.1 and 512.1.5 perhaps


    No one ran with that one recently!


    Regards


    BOD
Reply
  • Former Community Member
    0 Former Community Member
    Your point, I'm guessing, is that 773's are not always suitable for all circuits with 2.5 sq mm cables ... but that still doesn't answer RFC's.


    Yes, I wanted to illustrate that capacity doesn't always equate to CCC (sorry, current carrying capacity)


    Or that the use of a 2 mm2 neutral tail on a RCBO can indeed carry say 32 A but that its temperature may well be 105 C, when in a DB next to other wiring only rated at 70 C ........ 522.2.1 and 512.1.5 perhaps


    No one ran with that one recently!


    Regards


    BOD
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