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Multiple Ring Spurs.

When was it common to run a ring final in a loft of say a bungalow, and have multiple spurs running down to sockets in rooms below? Why did this come about? Was it a wartime materials' saving provision? I am working in an old building wired in the early to mid 60s and no sockets seem to be on a ring, just spurs, but there are rings at the fuse box. The collection of a multitude of junction boxes is something to behold. It is junction box city, now all hidden under layers of glass fibre insulation. A real pig.


Z.
Parents
  • It is a perfectly legitimate way to wire a ring circuit and with old-style single patress sockets much easier to wire than the loop through normally used now. I don't think it has anything to do with cable quantities or availability. Lots of roof insulation is a bit of a pain, I have a pointed metal rod with a hook on the other end for pushing cables through the insulation to be on the top. I suggest you make one. It saves a lot of itchy arms situations!
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  • It is a perfectly legitimate way to wire a ring circuit and with old-style single patress sockets much easier to wire than the loop through normally used now. I don't think it has anything to do with cable quantities or availability. Lots of roof insulation is a bit of a pain, I have a pointed metal rod with a hook on the other end for pushing cables through the insulation to be on the top. I suggest you make one. It saves a lot of itchy arms situations!
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