I have got to the stage in my house rewire where I am putting in an oven circuit. I dont know which oven to get yet and dont have the funds to get one. I have designed the circuit around a 7kw oven. So will have 30amp mcb, 6mm cable (about 20m long and taking into acount the route etc cable will be good for 34amps if it goes through insulation). I thought about a cooker switch but they seem to be 45amps. Is the cooker switch simply a dp switch or a dp switch with a 45amp fuse, if the latter then a cooker switch would be no use in this circuit for protection of the oven at the oven end (or wouldnt this matter as the circuit has a 30amp mcb). This confuses me as reading this forum I get the impression a fused connection is needed at the oven side so would need to be less than the current rating of the cable. All the cooker circuits ive seen using cooker switches go from them to the cooker without going through a fuse.
What i would like is a 30 amp dp switch to a wall outlet to the oven, but this would not have a fuse on the cooker side. would I therefore also have to have a 30amp fcu between it and the oven too?
If I then went for a smaller watt oven would I have to replace my 30amp dp switch or just the fcu?
In a nut shell Im clear about selecting the right cable for the circuit and oven and the correct mcb for the cu. But am confused about the best way to end the circuit and include a switch at the oven end when the size of the oven could be lower than I designed the circuit for.
What i would like is a 30 amp dp switch to a wall outlet to the oven, but this would not have a fuse on the cooker side. would I therefore also have to have a 30amp fcu between it and the oven too?
If I then went for a smaller watt oven would I have to replace my 30amp dp switch or just the fcu?
In a nut shell Im clear about selecting the right cable for the circuit and oven and the correct mcb for the cu. But am confused about the best way to end the circuit and include a switch at the oven end when the size of the oven could be lower than I designed the circuit for.