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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
  • Like this with a 12 kW electric flow boiler running at 53-amps on one of the RCDs along with other circuits and the PV feed in on the other, with the internal tails looping through the main switch outgoing terminals.

Reply
  • Like this with a 12 kW electric flow boiler running at 53-amps on one of the RCDs along with other circuits and the PV feed in on the other, with the internal tails looping through the main switch outgoing terminals.

Children
  • And if the P.V. electrons are fully used within the installation they will never flow through the main switch. It will be in at the 16 Amp M.C.B. along the busbar, then out to the loads on the final circuits. But if encouraged outside they may escape down the road to next door, via the main switch. But being home loving they may just stay put, especially if next door has its own P.V. system. Then there will be no encouragement to travel abroad for them. And all the local P.V. systems may raise the local supply Voltage to 253 Volts and start to get electronics in appliances hot.

    Quote. "As each electrical grid is unique, and has different characteristics, the grid-tie inverter must also be adjusted to match the unique characteristics of the local grid. If the inverter is not designed correctly for the appropriate grid that it is connecting to, higher levels of voltage can overload the grid if there are enough systems connected."

    Z.