We want to provide mains power to some desks in the middle of a open plan area, which has a concrete floor with laminate flooring - so no where to run cabling under the floor.
The desks will have between 2 to 8 computers (and their screens). The problem is how to get the ring mains to this area.
It's got a suspended ceiling, so one option is to run all the cabling we want down a "pipe" (or fake pillar) to the desks but this will never look pretty.
So the other option is to run cabling from one of the walls, over the floor surface but covered by conduit to the desks in the open area. (The nearest wall is only 2m away.) The conduit looks like this:
But in order for the conduit to be low profile, unobtrusive and not a major trip hazard, we have to minimize the cabling so I imagine that running the wiring for (say) 8 double sockets on a "proper" ring requires at least two cables/wires to the main area, which means a fatter floor conduit.
Can I instead have a single cord (i.e. not a ring/radial circuit) running along the floor to just one double socket, and from there just attach one or two regular 8 gang extension sockets to get the amount of mains sockets dependant on the number of computers.
I've always been told that extension cables are a bad idea and should be avoided but here it means that we have minimal cabling along the floor (I have to allow for two cat 5e network cables within the conduit too). It also means we can use these fancy surge protecting extensions that have a battery to act a UPS in the event of a power failure.
If we run this single cord and its double socket off it's own circuit breaker/MCB, can we happily use this setup with extension sockets from a overload and electrical safety point of view?
thanks,
Ash
P.S. I know I've been a frequent poster in the past few weeks and I hope I'm not taking advantage. If it's any consolation, I really appreciate the excellent advice so far and I'm learning a lot!
The desks will have between 2 to 8 computers (and their screens). The problem is how to get the ring mains to this area.
It's got a suspended ceiling, so one option is to run all the cabling we want down a "pipe" (or fake pillar) to the desks but this will never look pretty.
So the other option is to run cabling from one of the walls, over the floor surface but covered by conduit to the desks in the open area. (The nearest wall is only 2m away.) The conduit looks like this:
But in order for the conduit to be low profile, unobtrusive and not a major trip hazard, we have to minimize the cabling so I imagine that running the wiring for (say) 8 double sockets on a "proper" ring requires at least two cables/wires to the main area, which means a fatter floor conduit.
Can I instead have a single cord (i.e. not a ring/radial circuit) running along the floor to just one double socket, and from there just attach one or two regular 8 gang extension sockets to get the amount of mains sockets dependant on the number of computers.
I've always been told that extension cables are a bad idea and should be avoided but here it means that we have minimal cabling along the floor (I have to allow for two cat 5e network cables within the conduit too). It also means we can use these fancy surge protecting extensions that have a battery to act a UPS in the event of a power failure.
If we run this single cord and its double socket off it's own circuit breaker/MCB, can we happily use this setup with extension sockets from a overload and electrical safety point of view?
thanks,
Ash
P.S. I know I've been a frequent poster in the past few weeks and I hope I'm not taking advantage. If it's any consolation, I really appreciate the excellent advice so far and I'm learning a lot!