Discuss Advice on Installation in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

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Hi Folks,

If I'm extending a lighting circuit, (adding two pendants and an outside light) from an existing pendant but the board doesn't have any protection (an old BS3036 fuse board) What's the best way to add RCD protection?

The new cable for the switches can't buried more tore than 50mm deep and I don't want to whack an RCD FCU anywhere as they are quite bulky.

What would be the best course of action to take to install this circuit so it complies with the Regs?

Thanks,
T
 
You could install a 3 module consumer unit fed from your 3036 board, then install an RCD and 6a mcb for the lighting circuit in this cu, which is notifiable work.

But, by the time you’ve gone to all that effort for just 1 circuit, you’d be better off upgrading the complete board and protecting the whole house.
 
You could install a 3 module consumer unit fed from your 3036 board, then install an RCD and 6a mcb for the lighting circuit in this cu, which is notifiable work.

But, by the time you’ve gone to all that effort for just 1 circuit, you’d be better off upgrading the complete board and protecting the whole house.
If done SpinLondon,s way would it still be notifiable? the OCPD at the origin of the circuit would be unchanged, only addition of additional protection.
 
I figured the RCD FCU at the origin would be the simplest solution.

As the old Wylex Fuses for lifting circuits are rated at 5a... What size fuse would I put in the RCD FCU? A 3a?

I believe there are currently 4 pendants on the circuit.

I don't think it would be notifiable because i would just be adding a fuse on the existing wiring, it just happens to be next to/near the fuse board?

Correct me if I'm wrong.
 
As the old Wylex Fuses for lifting circuits are rated at 5a... What size fuse would I put in the RCD FCU? A 3a?
You need to get your discrimination tables out to answer that one!
My gut feel is that it won't discriminate.

But, whoa fella. Why an RCD FCU?. Just install an RCD.
You do not need any additional fusing.
 
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