Better, and much lower risk, would be to ask the electrician who you eventually want to sign an EIC and tell Building Control that he did it all what you should do.
Tht certainly could be a solution to the potentially very high electrical load of multiple electrical showers operating simultaneously (and perhaps that's what you meant), but I really can't see how it could be more efficient than heating the water with a shower when required.
Tht certainly could be a solution to the potentially very high electrical load of multiple electrical showers operating simultaneously (and perhaps that's what you meant), but I really can't see how it could be more efficient than heating the water with a shower when required.
Tht certainly could be a solution to the potentially very high electrical load of multiple electrical showers operating simultaneously (and perhaps that's what you meant), but I really can't see how it could be more efficient than heating the water with a shower when required.
Exactly. That's precisely how I have my (cheap but not 'more efficient') showers! ... unless, of course, one were to have one's showers during off-peak times, in which case the electric shower would again win (this time in terms of both cost and efficiency). However, for the OP, reducing maximum loading on his installation is probably the main consideration, in which case anything wins over electric showers!
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