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I totally disagree with this . This guy is not a practicing electrician. Manufacturers are allowed to type test their products with a certain amount of leakage. This is normal and is part of the electrical design. I have, as part of my job using 1000s pounds worth of test equipment proved this time and time again. Computers and servers , electricians know there are only so many you can put on a single RCD before nuisance tripping occurs and it is part of the design to create multiple ccts for offices that have a vast amount of computers. The story I told about the flat was a case in point, all the equipment was either new or very recent, there were no faults but the flat leaked and un-acceptable amount due to a high concentration of electronic equipment. Sorry but the guy is just plain wrong, and I raise his "knowledge" with a BSc 1st Class in electronic systems and control engineering and 34 years working in the electrical field...I spoke about this thread to a friend who is an electronic engineer & a top engineer at that & coincidently is about to do new wiring system for his own place.
His take on all this, (& I have removed some of the expletives he made about plumbers & most sparks) was this in an email to me -
"Re RCBOs - as the name suggests, they are a MCB with integral RCD! Good but unnecessary and expensive! A typical MCB is a couple of quid but these are £15-20 each. Not needed if an RCD feeding consumer unit. Only advantage is that if you have a dodgy appliance with earth leakage etc, it will only take down that circuit. Not a fat lot of use if your main ring main etc as you need to find the culprit or you can't get circuit back on until fault removed. Does mean, however, that your lights etc are still on for you to see!!!!
There are idiots who put these on where they have frequent tripping in order to not impact the remainder of house and other idiots talking about leaky appliances and sharing the leakage across a number of RCBOs in order to reduce tripping ( assuming leaky equipment on various circuits). If there is a small electrical leakage in your immersion e.g. It does not mean that it is an old element and acceptable and should be managed better by RCBOs ... It means it needs replaced! Same rules with other (typical element and or water based elements) steam irons, cooker elements (leaking moisture from cooking or elements starting to break down. "
He also later added - " FIX the leakage problem, don't try and resolve by electrical workarounds to minimise or hide the problem!! No leakage is acceptable - after all, how does virtually every household do without any trips?
I know some of you esteemed gentlemen occasionally dip into the cesspool that is electrickery so before sullying myself by visiting the sparky forum I'll ask here...
We're refurbishing our rental flat and the electrics are "interesting".
Economy 7 (we want rid of it)
All sockets on one ring (whole property under 100m2)
One circuit for storage heaters (removed a long while ago)
Immersion on it's own fuse
Shower and cooker on one fuse (well over it's capacity)
We are getting rid of fuse board, replacing with modern consumer unit.
Shower getting it's own RCBO
Oven getting it's own RCBO
Hob getting a new spur directly off consumer unit, it's own RCBO
Two new spurs off separate RCBOs for space heaters in bedroom and living room
Various sockets being relocated
We've been told that if we do major works such as a rewire (or have an extension built etc) then the kitchen MUST be on a separate ring to comply with regs.
My question is - does the above count as a rewire? Obviously it's not a full rewire but in my opinion it's a major enough piece of work to count as such and therefore need to comply. SWMBO (degree in electrical engineering) disagrees. no dispute that it's good practice to have a separate ring, but is it obligatory?
I have in mind Part L, and how a number of "component upgrades" ***ulatively become classed as a "system upgrade", necessitating fuller compliance. But I don't know if this applies to electrics as it does to gas & heating...
TIA,
Masood
I know some of you esteemed gentlemen occasionally dip into the cesspool that is electrickery so before sullying myself by visiting the sparky forum I'll ask here...
We're refurbishing our rental flat and the electrics are "interesting".
Economy 7 (we want rid of it)
All sockets on one ring (whole property under 100m2)
One circuit for storage heaters (removed a long while ago)
Immersion on it's own fuse
Shower and cooker on one fuse (well over it's capacity)
We are getting rid of fuse board, replacing with modern consumer unit.
Shower getting it's own RCBO
Oven getting it's own RCBO
Hob getting a new spur directly off consumer unit, it's own RCBO
Two new spurs off separate RCBOs for space heaters in bedroom and living room
Various sockets being relocated
We've been told that if we do major works such as a rewire (or have an extension built etc) then the kitchen MUST be on a separate ring to comply with regs.
My question is - does the above count as a rewire? Obviously it's not a full rewire but in my opinion it's a major enough piece of work to count as such and therefore need to comply. SWMBO (degree in electrical engineering) disagrees. no dispute that it's good practice to have a separate ring, but is it obligatory?
I have in mind Part L, and how a number of "component upgrades" ***ulatively become classed as a "system upgrade", necessitating fuller compliance. But I don't know if this applies to electrics as it does to gas & heating...
TIA,
Masood
I totally disagree with this . This guy is not a practicing electrician. Manufacturers are allowed to type test their products with a certain amount of leakage. This is normal and is part of the electrical design. I have, as part of my job using 1000s pounds worth of test equipment proved this time and time again. Computers and servers , electricians know there are only so many you can put on a single RCD before nuisance tripping occurs and it is part of the design to create multiple ccts for offices that have a vast amount of computers. The story I told about the flat was a case in point, all the equipment was either new or very recent, there were no faults but the flat leaked and un-acceptable amount due to a high concentration of electronic equipment. Sorry but the guy is just plain wrong, and I raise his "knowledge" with a BSc 1st Class in electronic systems and control engineering and 34 years working in the electrical field...
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