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Cooker and shower on the same circuit

Hello everyone,

A few months back, a qualified electrician told me that a cooker and a shower can both be put on the same circuit; that doesn't sound right, surely loads using such a large amount of power must be on their own individual circuits?

I haven't been able to ask a question about this until now because I had difficulty logging into my IET account and had to get a new username and password for it.

Thank you,

Dasa

Parents
  • well 'can' and 'its a good idea' are not the same.
    The regs do not exactly say 'never connect a shower and a cooker to the same circuit' I presume the assumption is that anyone wanting to do something that odd would have a really good reason.

    Now I assume this is the sort of shower that heats the water - not just an electric pump from a hot water tank heated another way - that would be OK, if eccentric, as the pump is a very light load compared to a heating element, though then I;d expect a local fuse for the motor.

    The regulations do strongly suggest that large loads like water heaters, cookers, and instant showers should have a dedicated supply and that it be sized for the load.... (well yes they would, normally, we expect that)

    Now maybe, if you know for certain that the two will never be switched on  together, it could be made to work, but even in a small 1 bed flat there is the risk of someone having a guest for dinner or something and getting a shower at the same time. In a large household it is very likely.

    It may be safe in some circumstances, I suggest it is never a good choice - perhaps as a temporary fix while building work is done or something, but only when everyone involved understands the limitations.

    Mike.

Reply
  • well 'can' and 'its a good idea' are not the same.
    The regs do not exactly say 'never connect a shower and a cooker to the same circuit' I presume the assumption is that anyone wanting to do something that odd would have a really good reason.

    Now I assume this is the sort of shower that heats the water - not just an electric pump from a hot water tank heated another way - that would be OK, if eccentric, as the pump is a very light load compared to a heating element, though then I;d expect a local fuse for the motor.

    The regulations do strongly suggest that large loads like water heaters, cookers, and instant showers should have a dedicated supply and that it be sized for the load.... (well yes they would, normally, we expect that)

    Now maybe, if you know for certain that the two will never be switched on  together, it could be made to work, but even in a small 1 bed flat there is the risk of someone having a guest for dinner or something and getting a shower at the same time. In a large household it is very likely.

    It may be safe in some circumstances, I suggest it is never a good choice - perhaps as a temporary fix while building work is done or something, but only when everyone involved understands the limitations.

    Mike.

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