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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
  • Such as a 30 amp fused switch supplying a 8.5 kW electric shower blowing up and disappearing in a cloud of smoke, just leaving a burn mark on the wall where it used to be?

    Design current (of a circuit). The magnitude of the current (rms value for AC) to be carried by the circuit in normal service.

    So assume 37 amps for a shower add 20 amps for the cooker allowing diversity adds up to 57 amps.

    The highest current rating for 6.0 mm twin and earth is 47 amps when it’s clipped direct, so it cannot have a 50 amp MCB. Generally the next available MCB rating is 40 amps.

    How long will a 40 amp MCB carry a 142.5% overload for, bearing the 142.5% is a conservative figure allowing diversity on the cooker load?

    Bear in mind that you need to take account of the MCB manufacturers MCB derating factors, something that some people have not considered when attempting to justify that this combined circuit arrangement is acceptable in similar previous discussions.

    www.hagerelectro.com.au/.../TECHINFO_MCBS.PDF

Reply
  • Such as a 30 amp fused switch supplying a 8.5 kW electric shower blowing up and disappearing in a cloud of smoke, just leaving a burn mark on the wall where it used to be?

    Design current (of a circuit). The magnitude of the current (rms value for AC) to be carried by the circuit in normal service.

    So assume 37 amps for a shower add 20 amps for the cooker allowing diversity adds up to 57 amps.

    The highest current rating for 6.0 mm twin and earth is 47 amps when it’s clipped direct, so it cannot have a 50 amp MCB. Generally the next available MCB rating is 40 amps.

    How long will a 40 amp MCB carry a 142.5% overload for, bearing the 142.5% is a conservative figure allowing diversity on the cooker load?

    Bear in mind that you need to take account of the MCB manufacturers MCB derating factors, something that some people have not considered when attempting to justify that this combined circuit arrangement is acceptable in similar previous discussions.

    www.hagerelectro.com.au/.../TECHINFO_MCBS.PDF

Children
  • How long will a 40 amp MCB carry a 142.5% overload for, bearing the 142.5% is a conservative figure allowing diversity on the cooker load?

    About half an hour according to Fig 3A4. Your point being?