Past advice here recommended use of 3 core 25mm SWA
So we get the full story, please link to the "past advice"
Past advice here recommended use of 3 core 25mm SWA
Everything up to and including the meter is the DNO's everything from the meter is down to you - with the caveat that you are not allowed to touch the meter itself.I thought the meter installer would go from service head to meter, (and from meter to switch fuse with "standard tails"? or is that my sparky's job?)
If I read your comments right you intend to run the cable meter tails in a cavity wall? Don't think that is allowed.
If I read your comments right you intend to run the cable meter tails in a cavity wall? Don't think that is allowed.
Some misreading going on here I think.. I can't see myself having said that anywhere in my post above.
I cannot immediately quote you the regulation but it is frowned upon for any cable to run in the cavity wall. IMHO any cable that crosses a cavity wall should have some form of protection anyway - SWA may fit this.The cable from switch fuse leaves the meter board area, goes into a buried 100mm duct running alongside the foundations, and then pops up inside the house party wall. It must then run a further few meters in the cavity at the base of the party wall (a 50mm cavity between two 100mm block dwarf walls) to reach the understairs cupboard, at which point it leaves the cavity ....
They are different things. One has a fuse and seems to be a requirement by the DNO when the CU is more than 3 metres from the main fuse - whereas the isolator does not have a fuse but is often fitted by the DNO so that electricians can connect directly to the CU from the isolator without the need either (illegally) connecting directly to the meter or having to call the DNO out again when the connection to the main fuse is needed.[You seem to refer to a switch fuse and a 100a isolator as different things. Is the switch in a switch fuse not a 100a isolator? Are you saying I need two switches and one fuse in the circuit between my meter and my cu that is ten metres away?
They will still require some form of fuse protection if the distance between the meter and the CU is more than 3 metres.[For clarity, when I say meter tails, I mean the bits of wire that come out of the meter. They cease being meter tails at the first thing they come to after the meter. A 9.5 metre length of SWA between CU and (some kind of switch) is not a meter tail in my dictionary
If I understand correctly Riveralt was indeed referring to two separate things - but I think probably mainly because of issues of practicality/convenience. Whilst the DNO (or meter operator) may well be prepared to connect the meter tails to an isolator switch, they may well not be prepared to connect them to a switch fuse. If that were the case, and you were going to have just a switch-fuse, then your electrician would have to be there at the same time as the DNO/MOP, or else the DNO would have to be called back when your electrician was there in order to disable the supply whilst the electrician connected the switch fuse.You seem to refer to a switch fuse and a 100a isolator as different things. Is the switch in a switch fuse not a 100a isolator? Are you saying I need two switches and one fuse in the circuit between my meter and my cu that is ten metres away?
If I read your comments right you intend to run the cable meter tails in a cavity wall? Don't think that is allowed.
Some misreading going on here I think.. I can't see myself having said that anywhere in my post above.
This is the part I read....
I cannot immediately quote you the regulation but it is frowned upon for any cable to run in the cavity wall. IMHO any cable that crosses a cavity wall should have some form of protection anyway - SWA may fit this.The cable from switch fuse leaves the meter board area, goes into a buried 100mm duct running alongside the foundations, and then pops up inside the house party wall. It must then run a further few meters in the cavity at the base of the party wall (a 50mm cavity between two 100mm block dwarf walls) to reach the understairs cupboard, at which point it leaves the cavity ....
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