FGS - am I the only one who read the OP?
His proposed design was 2.5mm² SWA on a 32A breaker supplying a CU with 1 x 16A and 6 x 6A breakers in it.
Spurring off a ring final does not absolve you from considering the current carrying capacity of the 2.5mm² cable as installed. Method C is 27A, which is less than 2 x 13A.Its totally permissable to fit a dsso on a 2.5 spur on a ring final and as I have mentioned before its common practice to make this provision for a washing machine and dishwasher for example.
You cannot blindly shove in a 2.5mm² spur and rely on the downstream protection of plug fuses to prevent overload if the CCC of your cable as installed is less than 26A.
So stop there.Much of this sort of appliance coming in from abroad with CE markings and moulded 13A plugs is rated at 3KW or even 3.2KW at 220V. Doing the sums 3200/220=14.55A, So thats wrong.
It's wrong.
Don't do it.
It contravenes the wiring regulations and therefore cannot be used as a justification for other, related, designs which also contravene them.
Ditto.220/14.55=15.2ohms and 240V/15.2=15.7A or 3.7KW. and there is 2 of those plugged into a DSSO so thats wrong too
No it does not.as the 2.5mm is running at peaks of 31A on a cable rated at 28A tops and yet it still complies with the regs
Or until the socket overheats and fails, because 31A is in excess of the current that BS 1363 sockets are rated at.and works ok till the cable gets too hot and fails.
No it is not.I know I am making reference to unrelated regs but that does not change the fact that in some circumstances it is permissible to inadequately protect a 2.5mm cable with a 32A device, knowing that the following protection is inadequate too.
It may be done in practice by the ignorant and incompetent, and it may even be fairly widespread and not responsible for many problems but that does not make it permissible.
Hi BAS
I'm on your side here, I say the practice of using a 2.5 spur on a ring final is wrong despite the fact that it is well documented within the regs and associated 'official' publications
The simple fact is that as it is acceptable, it is done and frequently, I know its wrong and you know its wrong but its still in the regs. I have corrected too many such installations to be able to count them, fortunately its usually the socket or termination that fails open circuit before a fire starts.
Its also a fact that many goods come into the country with CE markings and moulded 13A plugs which blatantly require more than 13A, and yes I have measured the current of these machines. In one Bosch washing machine the heater alone was measured in excess of 14A and it still had its working, melted, moulded plug in place. If the manufacturers and the qualified sparks are getting this so wrong what chance does Joe Public have?
Again apologies for raising this subject in an unrelated thread. BUT to my mind the 2.5mm feed on a 32A breaker was probably the worst error in the proposed works, most of the other errors were just wrong but not particularly dangerous.