Discuss SWA For meter tails? in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

Give a guy a break. If you looked at my profile you would see I'm a qualified electrician but still very new to the trade. I thought this forum was here to help people like me who are still learning, rather than knock us down. If people can't be open and ask questions that might show they are inexperienced then it rather limits the usefulness of such forums. I'm already aware I lack practical experience and have been trying to find someone with more experience I can work with as an Electricians Mate to remedy that. In the meantime I turn to you guys... As it happens I probably am going to involve someone with more experience on this one, as no answers from anyone on the routing question, although I appreciate that's difficult to visualise on a forum such as this.
CSA may be obvious when you have been in the industry for years, but when you see a listing for 25mm SWA that specifies 25mm OD and makes no reference to CSA/core size alongside, it does raise a question mark in one's mind.
 
Give a guy a break. If you looked at my profile you would see I'm a qualified electrician but still very new to the trade. I thought this forum was here to help people like me who are still learning, rather than knock us down. If people can't be open and ask questions that might show they are inexperienced then it rather limits the usefulness of such forums. I'm already aware I lack practical experience and have been trying to find someone with more experience I can work with as an Electricians Mate to remedy that. In the meantime I turn to you guys... As it happens I probably am going to involve someone with more experience on this one, as no answers from anyone on the routing question, although I appreciate that's difficult to visualise on a forum such as this.
CSA may be obvious when you have been in the industry for years, but when you see a listing for 25mm SWA that specifies 25mm OD and makes no reference to CSA/core size alongside, it does raise a question mark in one's mind.
Not in an Electrician's mind it doesn't, just checked your profile, those qualifications you have, are designed for practising Electricians, designed to update their knowledge. These courses do not make you an Electrician, if you were told that by the Training Schools then you have been duped.
 
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I've looked at your profile. There is nothing in there that indicates you are qualified in any meaningful sense as an electrician.

CSA is obvious to those that have been in the trade for ages, and also those new to the industry who have done proper training.
 
Don't take offence @Msitekkie . By most of the opinions on here I'm neither an 'electrician' or 'engineer'.... Everyone to their own.... :)
 
You’re probably getting the calculations wrong then, the average house doesn’t need much more than about 20A.

Out of interest how did you arrive at a figure over 100A for a house?
House+garage+workshop:
Starting with 7.4Kw Induction Hob (1st 10A plus 30% of the remainder) 16.6A already...
3Kw Immersion heater - No Diversity allowed another 13A...
3Ring + 3 Radial Circuits (100% of 1st & 40% of rest) 32+49.6 = 81.6A
+ 4 x 6A lighting - haven't worked out all the lights I'm having yet, so lighting diversity still up in the air (although mostly a mix of compact flourescents & LEDs).
I know diversity is a bit of a black art so any constructive comments/suggestions welcomed. As the immersion is only used in emergencies if CH not working. I'm wondering if there are any options there.
P.S I don't have a clamp meter yet.
 
The section on diversity in the OSG, has been the same content for quite some time, and is not reflective in modern appliances. So that guidance for RFC, can be taken with a pinch of salt. Unless your plugging in electric heaters in every socket outlet. Lighting circuits with LED lamps, will be only a few amps, again unless its like Blackpool illuminations. Get a clamp meter & check it out for yourself.
 
House+garage+workshop:
Starting with 7.4Kw Induction Hob (1st 10A plus 30% of the remainder) 16.6A already...
3Kw Immersion heater - No Diversity allowed another 13A...
3Ring + 3 Radial Circuits (100% of 1st & 40% of rest) 32+49.6 = 81.6A
+ 4 x 6A lighting - haven't worked out all the lights I'm having yet, so lighting diversity still up in the air (although mostly a mix of compact flourescents & LEDs).
I know diversity is a bit of a black art so any constructive comments/suggestions welcomed. As the immersion is only used in emergencies if CH not working. I'm wondering if there are any options there.
P.S I don't have a clamp meter yet.

Re the Hob (and the Oven if electric) won't necessarily draw their full current loads even when on max due to them being thermostatically controlled. Same goes for the immersion heater....
 
There’s little chance those ring circuits are going to pull over 80 amps after diversity, why not have a 20a radial upstairs, 20a radial downstairs and a ring for kitchen?
What are other radial circuits,
Think of peak times morning evenings when most load will be consumed should only be short periods when applying diversity,
a bs88-3 (new bs number for 1361) will take 190a for half hour fig 3A1 bs1761
I doubt very much your ever going to come anywhere near this.
I would recalculate put in an 80a kmf
 
There’s little chance those ring circuits are going to pull over 80 amps after diversity, why not have a 20a radial upstairs, 20a radial downstairs and a ring for kitchen?
What are other radial circuits,
Think of peak times morning evenings when most load will be consumed should only be short periods when applying diversity,
a bs88-3 (new bs number for 1361) will take 190a for half hour fig 3A1 bs1761
I doubt very much your ever going to come anywhere near this.
I would recalculate put in an 80a kmf
Radials are sockets in Garage, workshop & new utility room. Upstairs & downstairs are existing rings - don't really want to add work by converting to radials if I can avoid. Splitting kitchen off downstairs ring onto its own.
 
If you consider loads over 1kW, which could over a period of say an hour be on at the same time, some of which are thermostatically/simmerstat cycling on/off or controlled by a programmer, then I reckon your short-lived peak demand is:

Ind Hob 7kW (to take account of Christmas Day type useage)

Imm Htr 3kW

Wash Mach 2kW

Tumb Dry 2.5kW

Dish Wash 2kW

Electric Convection Oven 2.5kW

Total = 19kW = 79A at 240V for which 16mm2 tails and 60A/80A BS88 cut out is perfectly adequate.

Most of the time the load will be far less - I'd estimate the time-averaged power consumption over an hour period to be:

Ind Hob 2kW

Imm Htr 3kW

Wash Mach 0.5kW

Tumb Dry 1.5kW

Dish Wash 0.5kW

Electric Convection Oven 0.5kW

Total 8kW or circa 35A again well within the capacity of a 60A/80A BS88 fuse and 16mm2 tails.

In my home I have 2 TDs, 2WMs, DW, IH, 2 electric convection ovens all supplied by a 80A BS88. The short DNO meter tails are 16mm2 and the CU tails are 25mm2 but 16mm2 would have sufficed.
 
Completely agree with what Marconi has said, I can’t ever see the house pulling more than about 40 amps.

On your method though, your looking at it from the wrong angle if you have a down ring which is ok, why do you need to split it as this is adding another 14 or so Amps to your calc for an extra ring circuit
 
House+garage+workshop:
Starting with 7.4Kw Induction Hob (1st 10A plus 30% of the remainder) 16.6A already...
3Kw Immersion heater - No Diversity allowed another 13A...
3Ring + 3 Radial Circuits (100% of 1st & 40% of rest) 32+49.6 = 81.6A
+ 4 x 6A lighting - haven't worked out all the lights I'm having yet, so lighting diversity still up in the air (although mostly a mix of compact flourescents & LEDs).
I know diversity is a bit of a black art so any constructive comments/suggestions welcomed. As the immersion is only used in emergencies if CH not working. I'm wondering if there are any options there.
P.S I don't have a clamp meter yet.

If the immersion is only a backup then ignore it for this purpose.

81.6A of portable/small appliances in a house sounds ridiculous to me, does the total running current of every appliance you own actually add up to that much?

It helps to actually think about the real world rather than getting lost in the numbers written in a book.
What will actually be plugged in and operating during the average day, and will it all be on at the same time?
 

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