The IET is carrying out some important updates between 17-30 April and all of our websites will be view only. For more information, read this Announcement

Cabling out of back of consumer unit

This consumer unit is installed directly on to an internal stud wall. Note the cables coming through the rear. Makes a neat job. However, following a fire in a consumer unit in a relatively new house quite a number of years ago, I have always advised that when making cable entry via the rear, holes should be as tight as possible and/or intumescent sealing arrangement applied. In the case of that incident, the fire didn’t spread but smoke entered the stud and made its way out through an aerial socket in a bedroom of the floor immediately above the consumer unit, which was located in the ground floor cloak room. Volumes of choking smoke entered the bedroom where a baby was sleeping. It was quite some time before the smoke detector in the landing operated to wake the parents, narrowly missing a tragedy. 
The photo shows very common wiring practice which is likely present in many domestic situations. 

Parents
  • I can see the possible issue, but I can also see that the slot knockout is a very sensible solution to cable wrangling. Ideally the CU would be sunk into a masonry wall but stud walls are here to stay, and they will provide a lovely duct for cables, smoke, hot gas and so on. Given the odd mix of cables in the typical installation it would be hard to make a one size fits all hole, that is not 'too large' under some conditions.
    I think that things that expands in a fire are the way forward. Perhaps intumescent pillows or similar could be either in the CU or posted into the slack space of the hole, as a removable filler. There are also cable wraps that are made of the same stuff.

    Mike.

Reply
  • I can see the possible issue, but I can also see that the slot knockout is a very sensible solution to cable wrangling. Ideally the CU would be sunk into a masonry wall but stud walls are here to stay, and they will provide a lovely duct for cables, smoke, hot gas and so on. Given the odd mix of cables in the typical installation it would be hard to make a one size fits all hole, that is not 'too large' under some conditions.
    I think that things that expands in a fire are the way forward. Perhaps intumescent pillows or similar could be either in the CU or posted into the slack space of the hole, as a removable filler. There are also cable wraps that are made of the same stuff.

    Mike.

Children
No Data