Hi
(Photos) http://www.flickr.com/gp/14322092@N06/8Tsw01
me and my wife and kid moved into a [new] flat in berlin. our last flat had single-phase wiring, and old ceramic fuses. In the last flat, I successfully replaced all the old ceramic fuses in the old flat with proper MCB's and RCBO/RCCB/RCD's, with some help from an electrician in the ROI.
Our new flat has the typical (for berlin semi-renovated) old fuse-box; the twists are it has three-phase wiring coming in from the meter. The ROI electrician is not very familiar with 3-phase. There is an 18kw 3-phase continuous hot water heater for the kitchen sink and bathtub. The feed for the hot water goes out from the electrical box, directly above the second set of main fuses. (see photos)
Some of the single-phase wiring is current (modern, three-wire), some of the wiring is the original copper [two-wire, no earth]. It's a mixed bag.
My question are:
In the 3-phase portion: why are there two fuses for each phase? Is it some kind of safety thing? (refer to photo)
Since the three phase wiring feeds a hot water heater, should[n't] this ideally be covered by an RCD instead of fuses?
I have a 4-pole RCD, for the three phases and the neutral. This can simply replace the massive room these two pairs of three fuses are taking up in the box?
I've looked up the specs for a similar 3-phase 230v 18kw heater. Each phase is supposed to be covered by a 50amp fuse, but what is the rating of the RCD supposed to be?
Single phase: I want the I've installed on the porch to be covered by an RCD - and the outlets in the bathroom and the light. And the outlets in the kitchen too. Where is the best place(s) to put in the RCD's? There's more room in the existing main electrical box if I can replace the bottom two rows of fuses with a single RCD.
Regards.
(Photos) http://www.flickr.com/gp/14322092@N06/8Tsw01
me and my wife and kid moved into a [new] flat in berlin. our last flat had single-phase wiring, and old ceramic fuses. In the last flat, I successfully replaced all the old ceramic fuses in the old flat with proper MCB's and RCBO/RCCB/RCD's, with some help from an electrician in the ROI.
Our new flat has the typical (for berlin semi-renovated) old fuse-box; the twists are it has three-phase wiring coming in from the meter. The ROI electrician is not very familiar with 3-phase. There is an 18kw 3-phase continuous hot water heater for the kitchen sink and bathtub. The feed for the hot water goes out from the electrical box, directly above the second set of main fuses. (see photos)
Some of the single-phase wiring is current (modern, three-wire), some of the wiring is the original copper [two-wire, no earth]. It's a mixed bag.
My question
In the 3-phase portion: why are there two fuses for each phase? Is it some kind of safety thing? (refer to photo)
Since the three phase wiring feeds a hot water heater, should[n't] this ideally be covered by an RCD instead of fuses?
I have a 4-pole RCD, for the three phases and the neutral. This can simply replace the massive room these two pairs of three fuses are taking up in the box?
I've looked up the specs for a similar 3-phase 230v 18kw heater. Each phase is supposed to be covered by a 50amp fuse, but what is the rating of the RCD supposed to be?
Single phase: I want the I've installed on the porch to be covered by an RCD - and the outlets in the bathroom and the light. And the outlets in the kitchen too. Where is the best place(s) to put in the RCD's? There's more room in the existing main electrical box if I can replace the bottom two rows of fuses with a single RCD.
Regards.