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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
  • Lets turn this around.

    Some years ago I replaced a consumer unit, the existing 8.7 kW (37 amp) electric shower had been wired as spur from a socket ring circuit in 2.5 mm twin and earth protected by a B32 MCB, now admittedly the Installation Method of the 2.5 mm T&E spur was G in Free Air, there was no disputing that because it was just dangling in the airing cupboard completely unsupported, so had a current carrying capacity in excess of 27 amps, possibly even 32 amps to match the circuit protective device and the cable had not melted.

    I turned the shower on and after a couple of minutes asked the young single mum who was the homeowner to touch the wire with her hand as I was doing so, she exclaimed " Bl**dy hell, I could dry my knickers on that!".

    I installed a completely new circuit for that shower whilst carrying out the consumer unit, what if anything was wrong with that circuit regards non-compliances with BS7671 The wiring Regulations?

    Did I rip her off by charging her to do electrical work that was not required?

    Andy Betteridge. 

  • I have said multiple times in this thread that this is all assuming that the OCPD rating matches the cable. A 2.5mm spur off a 32A ring is under-rated unless it's only attached to a 13A FCU or one single/double socket that's assumed not to carry more than 13A. So yes, I would expect that cable to get excessively hot, and no, I wouldn't do that.

Reply
  • I have said multiple times in this thread that this is all assuming that the OCPD rating matches the cable. A 2.5mm spur off a 32A ring is under-rated unless it's only attached to a 13A FCU or one single/double socket that's assumed not to carry more than 13A. So yes, I would expect that cable to get excessively hot, and no, I wouldn't do that.

Children
  • No a 2.5 spur off a 32A ring final is not underrated. short circuit protection and earth fault protection is all that is required. Overload protection is not required if the ring is done correctly (max spur is one twin 13A socket - i will not muddy the waters by mentioning two unfused "death cubes" in a twin socket)