Bathroom appliance help please

Hi guys just after a bit of advice here please

Customer wants to build a full height cupboard and the bottom of the bath and put a washing machine and tumble dryer in it. It will have a door on the cupboard.

How would regs apply to this ? I can make it 3 x flex outlets and sfs outside the bathroom if need be rather than sockets.

The appliances would technically be within 600mm from the edge of the bath but inside a cupboard so couldn't remember if that then meant zones did not apply 

Thank you for any help here

Parents
  • In the CENELEC Harmonized Document HD 60364-7-701 that is likely to make its way into BS 7671 at the next version, the zones extend 60 mm into walls and partitions etc. surrounding the zones.

    Interesting. I wonder why 60mm - rather than say 50mm we currently have for depth of cable routing zones (presumably both are based on likely lengths of screws/nails driven into walls post installation). Would there need to be a similar 'or any depth' for steel stud walls?

    Hopefully the final form will be more 'up to 60mm into a wall' rather than 60mm beyond the interior surface of the wall ... which could a bit beyond thin walls. (Like Mike I'd have concerns about thin ones - my first house - 1930s build - had 2" breeze blocks with very thin plaster skims for the upstairs internal walls (discovered via a WTF moment when trying to drill for a new flush box)).

       - Andy.

Reply
  • In the CENELEC Harmonized Document HD 60364-7-701 that is likely to make its way into BS 7671 at the next version, the zones extend 60 mm into walls and partitions etc. surrounding the zones.

    Interesting. I wonder why 60mm - rather than say 50mm we currently have for depth of cable routing zones (presumably both are based on likely lengths of screws/nails driven into walls post installation). Would there need to be a similar 'or any depth' for steel stud walls?

    Hopefully the final form will be more 'up to 60mm into a wall' rather than 60mm beyond the interior surface of the wall ... which could a bit beyond thin walls. (Like Mike I'd have concerns about thin ones - my first house - 1930s build - had 2" breeze blocks with very thin plaster skims for the upstairs internal walls (discovered via a WTF moment when trying to drill for a new flush box)).

       - Andy.

Children