Hello
So a ring final has
So table 4C1
Hello
This question leads to the best practice of not putting the two legs of the ring down the wall to the socket under common capping or trunking, rather two pieces of trunking spaced slightly apart ;-) .
The way the regs are worded, one may argue that the two limbs of a ring or whatever (it could just as easily be a radial with a looped-back section) are one circuit, and grouping does not apply. However, while meeting the letter of the rule as written, this is not sensible, as one can easily consider a case where both cables are carrying significant current and the heat from one cable also elevates the temperature of the other.
The reason we have the grouping factors is not so that we can argue what constitutes a separate circuit, but rather that cables in the middle of bundles where all cables are loaded, do not overheat.
Now, having said that there is so much slack in the average domestic ring, in the sense that the loading over more than a few minutes is a lot less than the full 32A, that in fact there are very few cases of cables showing heat damage, and practice it may well not be a real issue. However, it may be unwise to push this with circuits that supply areas of heavy load - thinking kithchens laundries etc.
Mike
This question leads to the best practice of not putting the two legs of the ring down the wall to the socket under common capping or trunking, rather two pieces of trunking spaced slightly apart ;-) .
The way the regs are worded, one may argue that the two limbs of a ring or whatever (it could just as easily be a radial with a looped-back section) are one circuit, and grouping does not apply. However, while meeting the letter of the rule as written, this is not sensible, as one can easily consider a case where both cables are carrying significant current and the heat from one cable also elevates the temperature of the other.
The reason we have the grouping factors is not so that we can argue what constitutes a separate circuit, but rather that cables in the middle of bundles where all cables are loaded, do not overheat.
Now, having said that there is so much slack in the average domestic ring, in the sense that the loading over more than a few minutes is a lot less than the full 32A, that in fact there are very few cases of cables showing heat damage, and practice it may well not be a real issue. However, it may be unwise to push this with circuits that supply areas of heavy load - thinking kithchens laundries etc.
Mike
Thank you for the reply
However, while meeting the letter of the rule as written,
Thats all I am trying to understand, what is the rule. What Is written, it's quite difficult to decipher what they mean, and says two things in my opinion.
The reason we have the grouping factors is not so that we can argue what constitutes a separate circuit, but rather that cables in the middle of bundles where all cables are loaded, do not overheat.
Yes I don't want my cables to get hot, so I am concerned about understanding this table.
I am a worst case worrier, I guess.
Two radials would be two circuits.
Not really sure whats the difference (Its seems there isn't) between that and a ring final. You have two loaded legs, with some (indirectly ??) proportional relationship.
The leg with the greater resistance, will carry less current, but its still a factor.
Rings are on their way out i realise however.
You see all the time 50 x 50 trunking and often smaller, containing the majority of a domestics cables up to the board. It sounds like you are concerned about two legs of the same circuit in capping, so that makes me wonder about larger groupings of these circuits squeezed into trunking.
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And when this is discussed on forums, its alway, its only domestic, not fully loaded .....And that is very true. But the only domestic response, seems to be the end of the discussion.
I guess the regs can't really say in print, don't worry about it for domestic, this is more the case for environments that have heavy and constant loads.
So its just left hanging it seems. Two ring finals and you get a derating of possibly 0.64. which would push up to 4mm, and for main lightly loaded circuits. And also large areas taken up with lightly populated containment..
I have asked my CPS, and really searched and could not get an answer, to what appears to be a simple question .. is a ring, two multi core or one circuit.
not sure that rings are going anywhere soon ;-) Good for IT and high integrity earthing, and of course domestics. Rubbish for long thin shaped buildings of course.
Realise that as the designer, you can over-ride the default cable choices, and indeed use different grouping factors, if you know enough about the circuit and it's load use pattern to do so . Rather like the cable ratings for various installation methods that are not the same as the ones in the annex, what suits your specific situation is where a mixture of reasoning and experience comes to the rescue. (' in this case more than any two can't ever be fully loaded as the incomer is only 60A... vs ' I've seen loads like this and it's never an issue.')
Mike
depends for what purpose - in terms of the no of MCBs needed, a ring is one circuit. In terms of cable grouping, its just not really.
M.
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