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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
  • but I would object to the 2.5mm T&E cabled being protected by a B40.

    It might be (just) OK - it'll be protected from overload by the 13A fuse in the plug. 2.5mm² on a B40 should be OK provided Zs is low enough for instantaneous operation and PFC ≤ 6kA. The 1.5mm² c.p.c. is a bit more dubious - might be OK if PFC ≤3kA (or rather, strictly speaking, if the breaking capacity of the MCB is 3kA) or PEFC below 863A and 30mA RCD protected.

        - Andy.

Reply
  • but I would object to the 2.5mm T&E cabled being protected by a B40.

    It might be (just) OK - it'll be protected from overload by the 13A fuse in the plug. 2.5mm² on a B40 should be OK provided Zs is low enough for instantaneous operation and PFC ≤ 6kA. The 1.5mm² c.p.c. is a bit more dubious - might be OK if PFC ≤3kA (or rather, strictly speaking, if the breaking capacity of the MCB is 3kA) or PEFC below 863A and 30mA RCD protected.

        - Andy.

Children
  • The trouble with sockets is you can't guarantee what will be plugged into them. Stacked, unfused 2-way cube adaptors for example.