Hi, I have spent the last few hours searching the forum for answers, but as always there are plenty of regs to trip me up so it would be great if an expert could confirm if what I am planning is ok please.
I would like to add a number of extra sockets to my 1960's house and want to stay as close to the rules as possible. The problem being that when the house was rewired they only replaced the existing sockets and wiring and didn't provide any extra ones. This means that in the whole of the upstairs (hall way, large bedroom and small bedroom) there are only 2 socket outlets! If I don't add more sockets I will end up with multiple extension leads trailing all over the place which will be messy and a trip hazard.
Upstairs seems ok, I break the ring main and fit an accessible JB under the floorboards and run 2.5mmsq cable through holes in the joists until I get to the wall where I chase up to 450mm high in the wall, loop into a socket outlet and on to the next one and so on until I end up back at where I started, completing the loop.
Downstairs is harder... The floor is concrete and the walls are cavity concrete totalling 250mm from side to side. I estimate this is formed from 110mm concrete + 30mm cavity + 110mm. There is a similar lack of sockets here, the dining room having only one socket located right behind where the door opens!
I would like to sink this surface mounted box into the concrete wall and extend the ring main chasing horizontally. However this looks tricky as I can only chase 1/6 of the wall thickness (is this correct?) when going horizontally to the next socket and getting 2 x 2.5mmsq wires in an 18mm deep chase would be hard. Therefore I plan to run a single unfused spur from the existing socket in 2.5mmsq cable, but obviously can only fit one (double) outlet.
Will this be ok in terms of cable routings and not weakening the structure of the building too much?
Finally just out of interest, I believe I can replace existing damaged cables and outlets (on a like for like basis) even in a kitchen without requiring Part P certs, etc. Also a previous resident could legally have installed extra sockets in a kitchen in December 2004. If all their cabling became damaged this year, could I then legally replace all the cables for new harmonised cables and outlets? This would then look remarkably like a new install in a kitchen, but be totally compliant with the Part P regs?
I would like to add a number of extra sockets to my 1960's house and want to stay as close to the rules as possible. The problem being that when the house was rewired they only replaced the existing sockets and wiring and didn't provide any extra ones. This means that in the whole of the upstairs (hall way, large bedroom and small bedroom) there are only 2 socket outlets! If I don't add more sockets I will end up with multiple extension leads trailing all over the place which will be messy and a trip hazard.
Upstairs seems ok, I break the ring main and fit an accessible JB under the floorboards and run 2.5mmsq cable through holes in the joists until I get to the wall where I chase up to 450mm high in the wall, loop into a socket outlet and on to the next one and so on until I end up back at where I started, completing the loop.
Downstairs is harder... The floor is concrete and the walls are cavity concrete totalling 250mm from side to side. I estimate this is formed from 110mm concrete + 30mm cavity + 110mm. There is a similar lack of sockets here, the dining room having only one socket located right behind where the door opens!
I would like to sink this surface mounted box into the concrete wall and extend the ring main chasing horizontally. However this looks tricky as I can only chase 1/6 of the wall thickness (is this correct?) when going horizontally to the next socket and getting 2 x 2.5mmsq wires in an 18mm deep chase would be hard. Therefore I plan to run a single unfused spur from the existing socket in 2.5mmsq cable, but obviously can only fit one (double) outlet.
Will this be ok in terms of cable routings and not weakening the structure of the building too much?
Finally just out of interest, I believe I can replace existing damaged cables and outlets (on a like for like basis) even in a kitchen without requiring Part P certs, etc. Also a previous resident could legally have installed extra sockets in a kitchen in December 2004. If all their cabling became damaged this year, could I then legally replace all the cables for new harmonised cables and outlets? This would then look remarkably like a new install in a kitchen, but be totally compliant with the Part P regs?