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Induction Hob again

Former Community Member
Former Community Member
I hope that you don’t find me impudent but I am having difficulty finding an electrician to explain why they will not install the induction hob and double oven that we are looking to fit in our new kitchen.
We have chosen a hob 7.4 kW and oven 6.3 kW. The cooker radial circuit has 6mm2 cable with 40A MCB. The run is some 12 m. The house was built (converted) in 2002 and inspected last year (DPN18C). We cannot run an extra cable because the CU is separated from the kitchen without a horizontal floor or roof space and presumably runs the existing cable through the stud walls.
The kitchen fitting company electrician has visited but won’t carry out the work unless we sign an indemnity as it would invalidate our insurance and the appliance guarantee. He suggested instead two plug-in ovens which we could add to the ring main. I have contacted four other local electricians but they all use 13.7 kW means 59.7 A which means 10 mm cable and ignore my request to consider diversity.
Should I give up and accept the two oven solution or perhaps a gas oven?
Do you know of a way of finding someone who understands diversity?
Am I simply wrong?

Parents
  • When you get to places in the world with poorer supplies, the induction cooker that plugs into the normal socket comes into its own

    Not just due to poorer supplies - I saw a description of a posh new "concept" kitchen where they replaced the conventional 4-ring hob with a number of single-ring portable induction hobs - the idea being you could plug in as few or as many as you needed for a particular meal - and indeed space them around the worktop as best suits your work pattern - or put them back in the cupboard and reclaim the worktop space for other uses.


    They're also popular with caravaners (why pay for gas when you can use the site electric for free).


      - Andy.
Reply
  • When you get to places in the world with poorer supplies, the induction cooker that plugs into the normal socket comes into its own

    Not just due to poorer supplies - I saw a description of a posh new "concept" kitchen where they replaced the conventional 4-ring hob with a number of single-ring portable induction hobs - the idea being you could plug in as few or as many as you needed for a particular meal - and indeed space them around the worktop as best suits your work pattern - or put them back in the cupboard and reclaim the worktop space for other uses.


    They're also popular with caravaners (why pay for gas when you can use the site electric for free).


      - Andy.
Children
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