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

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
  • Unfortunately comments like “I'm afraid I agree with Wally above. It is perfectly true (unfortunately) that this may not be understood by many "electricians", but that is because they are not suitably qualified for the job.” are far from helpful and add nothing to the discussion.

    we need to avoid a chocolate teapot scenario.

    I say that there is no point in making teapots out of chocolate, because the handle will melt when someone holds it and the complete teapot will melt when hot water is poured into it, making it unfit for purpose and potentially dangerous as someone may be scalded when the hot water spills out.

    Given your style of presenting an argument I could imagine you coming back saying, if you don’t hold the teapot for very long and only use it for iced tea it will be absolutely fine; and there are not any regulations that say teapots cannot be made out of chocolate, also there’s no reason why anyone should get hurt using a chocolate teapot so long as they know its limitations.

  • Well, my stance is that, while it is far from ideal to share the circuit,

    (1) from a safety viewpoint, I have not yet seen any argument which convinces me that there is additional danger in doing so.

    (2) It will provide satisfactory service for the vast bulk of time - maybe a very occasional trip.

    While I would be exceedingly unlikely to install such a circuit myself, if doing an EICR I don't see that it merits a C1/C2. A C3 perhaps, with suitable commentary.

    This situation is completely unlike a chocolate teapot, in that such a teapot is completely useless, while the shared circuit will likely allow the house owner to shower and cook to their heart's content for years without ever being aware that there might be an issue.

Reply
  • Well, my stance is that, while it is far from ideal to share the circuit,

    (1) from a safety viewpoint, I have not yet seen any argument which convinces me that there is additional danger in doing so.

    (2) It will provide satisfactory service for the vast bulk of time - maybe a very occasional trip.

    While I would be exceedingly unlikely to install such a circuit myself, if doing an EICR I don't see that it merits a C1/C2. A C3 perhaps, with suitable commentary.

    This situation is completely unlike a chocolate teapot, in that such a teapot is completely useless, while the shared circuit will likely allow the house owner to shower and cook to their heart's content for years without ever being aware that there might be an issue.

Children
No Data