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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
  • So will the installation ever draw 116 A? and if so, how does the 100 A main switch cope?

    As far as overload protection is concerned, it is able to. That's where the new extra bit of 551.7.2 comes into play.

    In more practical point of view, if the 16A comes in at the opposite end of the bus-bar from the main switch, then neither the main switch or bus-bar at any point will have to carry over 100A, In theory there's still a problem with the additional heating from the thermal elements of MCBs etc, - 116 amps worth in an enclosure designed for 100 amps worth - but given the Irish use DP MCBs as their incomers in what otherwise looks like a very similar setup to our CUs I'm not yet convinced there's a practical problem,

    Of course, someone suggested CUs could be designed with a general 116A rather than 100A rating a few years ago,,,,

       - Andy,

Reply
  • So will the installation ever draw 116 A? and if so, how does the 100 A main switch cope?

    As far as overload protection is concerned, it is able to. That's where the new extra bit of 551.7.2 comes into play.

    In more practical point of view, if the 16A comes in at the opposite end of the bus-bar from the main switch, then neither the main switch or bus-bar at any point will have to carry over 100A, In theory there's still a problem with the additional heating from the thermal elements of MCBs etc, - 116 amps worth in an enclosure designed for 100 amps worth - but given the Irish use DP MCBs as their incomers in what otherwise looks like a very similar setup to our CUs I'm not yet convinced there's a practical problem,

    Of course, someone suggested CUs could be designed with a general 116A rather than 100A rating a few years ago,,,,

       - Andy,

Children
  • I;m sure if it becomes a thing, stick on "16" s will be available to cover the "00"

    Mean while most 100A fuses can pass 116A all day anyway.

    Mike.