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What 'harm' resulted, eventually?
Kentucky Fried Cable!
What 'harm' resulted, eventually?
The situation, particularly the vocabulary, is, indeed confusing - and I think the reason is that BS7671 is very non-exhaustive in its definitions. AFAICS, there are, in fact, three main categories of situations in which 'overcurrents' (currents greater than the design current of the circuit which, if high and persistent enough, could damage wiring or other parts of the installation) can flow:... Apart from going round in circles It would seem one of us is confused.
An appliance which cannot cause an overload (an overcurrent occurring in a circuit which is electrically sound) can be installed on an OPD whose rating is greater than the CCC of the cable because it (the cable) will not have to deal with loads greater than that of the appliance's stated rating for which the cable has been selected.
Should a fault occur the OPD will operate as this will have been determined. That was what I thought wrong with Simon's hypothesis because, I don't think, an immersion can cause a fault current which is (as you mention) only double the cable's CCC.
Fair enough, but in any situation like that, I would say that it's only reasonable if one feels that a 'type (2)' situation (as well as a 'BS7671 overload') cannot be created within the appliance. Maybe that's what's confused you, and maybe others - I (and Simon, and maybe others) have been talking about 'overload' when we have usually meant 'type (2)', not a 'BS7671 overload'.The first that springs to mind is connecting a small oven to the cooker circuit by the supplied flex (MIs notwithstanding).In what sort of circumstances would you personally consider it 'useful or necessary' to invoke 433.3.1(ii)?
I'm still pretty surprised, unless there was a very adverse installation method. Per the CCCs we work with and the known characteristics of MCBs, we know that 2.5mm² cable clipped direct is considered able to cope with about 39A for 1 hour without suffering any harm. That's almost as much as a 10.8 kW shower, which will rarely be on for anything like as long as an hour at a time (unless, I suppose, teenagers are in the equation ).Kentucky Fried Cable!What 'harm' resulted, eventually?
Fair enough. 'Condemning it on the basis of the CSA alone' is obvioulsy what you had to do, since that's clearly non-compliant. I was merely pointing out that the reason why these 'frightening' situations often persist (without any melting or other incidents) is that, in practice, one can often go quite far into non-compliance before anything actually 'happens'! - the regs seem to have some pretty large safety margins built in.To be fair, I didn't go into the nitty gritty of the installation: I just condemned it on the basis of the csa alone. But there may well have been loft insulation involved (there often is!) and given that is seemed to be an immersion conversion (poetic) and therefore DIY, there could have been poor connections too. But the cable was badly melted for quite some distance.
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