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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
  • From the Hager MCB derating guide, assuming an ambient temperature of 40°C which is quite realistic given the MCB is running overloaded for an extended period, a 40 amp MCB is under rated just for a 8.5 kW shower, never mind running a cooker at the same time.

    So the first challenge is keeping the overloaded MCB cool.

    • From the Temperature Derating table,
    The nominal trip current (In) of 40A MCB operating at 40°C is derated to 36.8A.
    • From the Grouping Factor table,
    Three MCBs installed side by side has a grouping factor K(g) = 0.95
    • Combined effect of temperature derating & grouping factor, 36.8 x 0.95 = 34.96A.

  • In a fully filled consumer unit the tripping current of the 40 amp MCB could easily be down 31.28 amps with a derating factor of 0.85 and an ambient temperature of 40 C.

  • You're double-counting the ambient temperature of the CU and the MCB. Initially both the CU and the MCB will be at ambient (20°C say), then say the shower and oven are switched on. The MCB starts heating up as it's supposed to, since the bimetallic strip is designed to heat up and eventually trip on long overload. So after half an hour it trips. During this time the CU will have started to warm up a bit, but is unlikely to have reached 40°C. Now if on the other hand we were having a heat wave and the CU started off at 40°C  ambient, then yes, the MCB might trip after 4 minutes rather than 30 mins. But so what? The home owner learns not to run the shower and cooker simultaneously in a heat wave. It's still safe, still nothing has set on fire.

  • If the shower is rated at about 8.5kW rather than nearer 10kW, there should be no problem.

    Have you ever measured a 40 degree C temperature in a domestic consumer unit Andy?

    Z.

Reply
  • If the shower is rated at about 8.5kW rather than nearer 10kW, there should be no problem.

    Have you ever measured a 40 degree C temperature in a domestic consumer unit Andy?

    Z.

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