The IET is carrying out some important updates between 17-30 April and all of our websites will be view only. For more information, read this Announcement

This discussion is locked.
You cannot post a reply to this discussion. If you have a question start a new discussion

Conduit requirements and cable type

Former Community Member
Former Community Member

I’m in the process of installing seven hard wired fire alarms into our property all of which have to be interlinked.



I intend to re use a now empty steel conduit that runs from right beside our consumer unit up into the loft space. The steel conduit at its point of entry into the loft terminates there presumably the rest was removed in the past. I want to run a cable from there which will have to do an up and over brickwork in the loft.



My first question, is it acceptable in compliance with electrical regulations to simply clip the cable to the brick at the mortar joints or do I have to or even if strictly not necessary should I, put the cable in PVC conduit? This area is not trafficked.



Once I have crossed the brick work and come down to the first alarm, from there I intend to run a cable down the near center of the loft adjacent to the walkway in pvc conduit parallel to the 2 existing lighting circuit conduits located above the joists. I am not going to drill through the joists. At points along the conduit there will be junctions to allow clipped cable not in conduit to be ran parallel to the joists to the relevant alarm. The conduit is going to be a straight run, so my question is having consulted a few sources that state 1.5mm flexible cable not twin and earth must be used in conduit, does it? I understand the reason for flexible cable in conduit with a lot of turns and junctions but this is a straight run.


Thanks


Parents
  • For those wondering what you get for your extra money with FP200, there is rather a nice   John Ward youtube demo with blow torch   For those in a hurry skip past the chat about what it is for and 8 or 9  minutes of flame waving, to about 11 mins in, where he pulls the cores out of the charred remains of the  bit he has been cooking, and the inner insulation is perfectly intact.

    you cannot do that with PVC.

    Of course if you join it in a plastic box with plastic choc blok, it rather defeats the point.

    If only consumer units could have the same sort of additives in the plastic...


    Mike
Reply
  • For those wondering what you get for your extra money with FP200, there is rather a nice   John Ward youtube demo with blow torch   For those in a hurry skip past the chat about what it is for and 8 or 9  minutes of flame waving, to about 11 mins in, where he pulls the cores out of the charred remains of the  bit he has been cooking, and the inner insulation is perfectly intact.

    you cannot do that with PVC.

    Of course if you join it in a plastic box with plastic choc blok, it rather defeats the point.

    If only consumer units could have the same sort of additives in the plastic...


    Mike
Children
No Data