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
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