didnt get chance to pop into my friends last night, but I am pretty sure that the electric hob and cooker are both wired into the same point behind the cooker. I havnt looked to check for sure, but thats what my friend recalls from memory. He has a standard single oven and a halogen hob, so if it were wired into one single point I would assume there should be at least a 6mm or even 10mm cable running straight back to a 45a fuse at the consumer unit? (PS: Im no sparky just thinking common sense).
Thing is if is is all wired on the same ring (cooker, tumble dryer, washing machine, immersion heater, cooker, hob etc etc) surely there is also a fire risk involved here.
Anyway I will check when I get chance over the next day or so and see what wires are going where.
Thing is if is is all wired on the same ring (cooker, tumble dryer, washing machine, immersion heater, cooker, hob etc etc) surely there is also a fire risk involved here.
Unlikely to catch fire, the MCB will trip if too much current is drawn. That's what it's there for.
As stated previously one ring is not uncommon.
My house 3 bed detached when built in 1964 only had one ring for the whole house (there are four now)
My mothers 2 bed bungalow built in 1980 still only has one ring.
It's not uncommon today to plug ovens in as they don't take huge amounts of electricity. On the otherhand electric hobs do. (I assume the hob is electric and not gas with electricity for spark ignition)
The immersion should be on a separate circuit though, and have been that way for a while. When I trained in 1980 fixed water heaters weren't allowed on a ring, they had to have a separate circuit.
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