Hi, I have a direct wired cooker on a 40A type B MCD. Is it ok to switch out the direct wire for a 32A 3-pin industrial socket (so the cooker could be unplugged and something else plugged in from time to time in a domestic installation?
It's really a matter of 'compliance with BS7671' rather than "legality", since compliance with BS7671 is not mandatory, and nor are there any laws which would demand what you suggest.@DIYbot2 no idea on the legality, although I believe in domestic settings you have to use an interlocked or shuttered socket ....
Perhaps you speak the same 'language'.Seems simple enough to understand to me.
So, you're not sure which.He has a direct connection (cooker plate or JB)
Then how is that "switch out the direct wire"?and wants to swap for a blue 32A plug and socket.
I am also one of those many people who believe that, too - but nothing in BS7671 says anything about sockets which provide "a safety function at least equivalent to the shutters on a standard domestic socket".There is some room for argument on this one. The regulations forbid the use of un-shuttered sockets on domestic installations, however many people, myself included, believe that a switched interlocked industrial socket provides a safety function at least equivalent to the shutters on a standard domestic socket.
Well, we don't know what the 'something else' he might want to plug in 'from time to time' might be, but, in terms of the cooker, one more thing that we might need to say (ask) is why he doesn't have his cooker circuit protected by a 32A MCB (which the vast majority of cooker circuits are).It is a 32amp rated socket on a 40 MCB. Need we say more?
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