J
Joe9876543210
Hi.
I am an apprentice electrician, and was wondering if anyone could help me as I'm getting confused with something that's probably quite simple.
If I am correct to work out the amps running though an appliance you do w/voltage. So 10kw/240v = approx 42amps. Of I'm correct in this?
My boss recently at work was trying to explain that a bs1361 100amp fuse has a short circuit capacity of about 50ka. What does This mean of it's already 100amps anyway?
In a flat there was a bs1361 60amp, but I presumed you would need higher, more like a 100amp as collectively the property had two 10.5kw showers, an electric cooker, a kitchen ring with dryer, fridge, freezer and also a 9.5kw water heater so collectively that equates to roughly 35kw if every appliance is used at once? But then surely 35000/240 = 145amps? On a 60amp fuse. Something isn't right here.
I'm very confused... Please can someone explain to me in a simple and understandable format how it works? It's really playing on my mind.
thank you.
I am an apprentice electrician, and was wondering if anyone could help me as I'm getting confused with something that's probably quite simple.
If I am correct to work out the amps running though an appliance you do w/voltage. So 10kw/240v = approx 42amps. Of I'm correct in this?
My boss recently at work was trying to explain that a bs1361 100amp fuse has a short circuit capacity of about 50ka. What does This mean of it's already 100amps anyway?
In a flat there was a bs1361 60amp, but I presumed you would need higher, more like a 100amp as collectively the property had two 10.5kw showers, an electric cooker, a kitchen ring with dryer, fridge, freezer and also a 9.5kw water heater so collectively that equates to roughly 35kw if every appliance is used at once? But then surely 35000/240 = 145amps? On a 60amp fuse. Something isn't right here.
I'm very confused... Please can someone explain to me in a simple and understandable format how it works? It's really playing on my mind.
thank you.