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Is this considered ring in general and/or by the regs?

Discuss Is this considered ring in general and/or by the regs? in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

J

JuniorSparky

Hi everyone,

I was asked to fix a messed up ring. The client doesn't want to tear apart everything and asked if it will comply with the regs if it is done like this - Let's say we have a ring with three points and a spur from each point. The point is that the three points on the ring will be actually three junction boxes (all accessible) and from each one there will be a run/spur to where the socket outlet will be.
It looks weird to me and not sure if I want to do it, but I can't see why it can't be done! I don't have so extensive experience like you all guys, so any thoughts will be appreciated!

Cheers
 
I don't know. This is why I was asked to fix it!

Yes, I will go first to take a look before I start. He's far from me, so I'm getting as much info as I can before my visit!
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Sounds like a Spider ring or radial.
If it covers more than one floor, most likely a ring.
Don't take any notice of the one spur per point myth, as it's just a myth.
Spurs can be taken from any point on a ring, including the CU, as shown in Appendix 15.
 
I'm not sure I'd want every socket in the house to be on a fused spur with a 13A fuse upstream of it. Daisy-chaining points behind a fused spur avoids any question of cable overload but it's not good practice and doesn't make the CCC of the ring available throughout which is the main idea.

I'm interested why they put a stop to that method Dave? It would still have the same balanced current across the two legs of the supply, topographically it's still a ring final in that respect even to the point that if the junction boxes were sockets it would be compliant.

I've always though that the main point of this is to encourage installers to run the ring around most of the floor area of the premises. Otherwise there might be all sorts of haphazard layouts, e.g. a small ring around a central area with spurs heading out to do most of the work - a kind of extreme spider ring - or a long thin ring along one side and spurs across. There was a period when old radial installations were being modernised with rings and the temptation would have been to re-purpose the radials as spurs. This defeats the main advantages of the RFC - to enable full capacity to be used almost anywhere and to allow easy expansion by breaking into the ring.

There is also the aspect that if you use actual points at the spur tap-off locations, they will attract some of the loading from the ends of the spurs.
 
Spider rings comply, but are rather impractical.
Spurs cannot be taken from existing sockets, as they are already Spurs.
They involve JBs invariably under floor boards which since the advent of fitted carpets are virtually inaccessible, and especially so now with the trend for laminate flooring.
 

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