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. 

  • That is an interesting excerpt, and while much broader in catchment - even a caravan has sleeping accommodation after all-  feels much more accepting that there may be other ways to mitigate the risk, that are not 'install an AFDD willy nilly' without mandating what they are. Some old school solutions like metal conduit and pyro wire come to mind but I am sure that careful placement (and selection) of wiring and accessories cover a lot of it and things like not leaving huge voids for fire to spread unseen are far more significant in lives saved per pound spent.

    I think "right at the bottom of my list of suggested control measures. If one had to pare things from a limited budget, they would be first to go." is probably about right.

    Mike

  • XLPE cables also don't char in the same, with the consequetial breakdown of cable insulation,  way as PVC cables so you have to ask why we need AFDDs on circuits supplying sockets in some builings and recomended in all buildings? I would be interested in your views?

    John, are you saying that it is easier to justify AFDDs for circuits composed of PVC cables than XLPE ones please?

    If "put your money where your mouth is" means anything, I have not put them in my recent CU upgrade at home. However, neither have I replaced any of the PVC final circuit cables.