S
Salisbury
I am about to embark on a project to convert the top floor of my garage into a small granny annexe. There are lots of considerations to make, but one of them is the electric supply.
The garage is about four meters away from the house. At present, it is served by a 6mm twin and earth single cable running in an old conduit underground to a separate fuse box with a small ring main fuse and a lighting circuit fuse. In the garage there are just two sockets, so obviously the 6mm cable is adequate for the existing purpose. I cannot be 100% sure because there are no markings on the cable, but its outer width is about 14mm across the flat pvc sheath, which I believe means that it is likely to be 6mm. I suspect that for my future purposes, this may not be large enough. Can anyone advise what cable size would be recommended to comply with regulations ?
My intention is to have a new fuse box / consumer unit fitted in the garage, with six or seven circuits - one for the 2 power points in the garage, one for the lighting in the garage, one for the power points in the granny annexe above (maybe 6 of them ?), one for the lighting circuit in the granny annexe, one for an immersion heater, probably, and one for an electric cooker, probably. The heating will be separate, either bottled gas or preferably oil (if I can find a small enough oil boiler which is difficult these days !) I am hoping to be able to fit a hot and cold piped shower, but if I cannot find a suitable small boiler, I may be forced to install an electric shower, so when sizing the underground cable, it should be taken into account possibly.
I am about to have the drive tarmaced which means that I will have to lay any utility cables now before it is too late !
While on that subject, I wonder whether I should also lay a TV antenna in screened cable in the ground to serve the granny annexe. We live in the country and the TV signal is very weak - I need a booster box. Therefore there will definitely be no signal in the annexe because the roof is far too low. The only conventional possibility would be to take a cable from the TV antenna on the chimney of the house, down the wall and underground into the garage and then to the annexe - that would be a long run, even for a booster probably. The alternative would be some sort of wireless transmitter from the antenna on the chimney to the granny annexe which would avoid the need for a cable underground. I do not have a TV myself, so I know absolutely nothing about these things - I stopped paying the BBC the licence fee when Jonathan Ross was being paid ÂŁmillions, and I decided that if they had that much money to waste they did not need any money from me ! I got rid of the TV and I have not missed it for one moment; I have far too many interests to have the time to watch it. The trouble is obviously that a granny annexe will need a TV and therefore I will have to do something about it now.
So can anyone advise whether there are gadgets on the market that will simply broadcast the signal by wireless over that distance, or is it better to lay a TV cable now ? I do not want to have to dig up the new tarmac later.
Thanks for any advice on these two matters.
The garage is about four meters away from the house. At present, it is served by a 6mm twin and earth single cable running in an old conduit underground to a separate fuse box with a small ring main fuse and a lighting circuit fuse. In the garage there are just two sockets, so obviously the 6mm cable is adequate for the existing purpose. I cannot be 100% sure because there are no markings on the cable, but its outer width is about 14mm across the flat pvc sheath, which I believe means that it is likely to be 6mm. I suspect that for my future purposes, this may not be large enough. Can anyone advise what cable size would be recommended to comply with regulations ?
My intention is to have a new fuse box / consumer unit fitted in the garage, with six or seven circuits - one for the 2 power points in the garage, one for the lighting in the garage, one for the power points in the granny annexe above (maybe 6 of them ?), one for the lighting circuit in the granny annexe, one for an immersion heater, probably, and one for an electric cooker, probably. The heating will be separate, either bottled gas or preferably oil (if I can find a small enough oil boiler which is difficult these days !) I am hoping to be able to fit a hot and cold piped shower, but if I cannot find a suitable small boiler, I may be forced to install an electric shower, so when sizing the underground cable, it should be taken into account possibly.
I am about to have the drive tarmaced which means that I will have to lay any utility cables now before it is too late !
While on that subject, I wonder whether I should also lay a TV antenna in screened cable in the ground to serve the granny annexe. We live in the country and the TV signal is very weak - I need a booster box. Therefore there will definitely be no signal in the annexe because the roof is far too low. The only conventional possibility would be to take a cable from the TV antenna on the chimney of the house, down the wall and underground into the garage and then to the annexe - that would be a long run, even for a booster probably. The alternative would be some sort of wireless transmitter from the antenna on the chimney to the granny annexe which would avoid the need for a cable underground. I do not have a TV myself, so I know absolutely nothing about these things - I stopped paying the BBC the licence fee when Jonathan Ross was being paid ÂŁmillions, and I decided that if they had that much money to waste they did not need any money from me ! I got rid of the TV and I have not missed it for one moment; I have far too many interests to have the time to watch it. The trouble is obviously that a granny annexe will need a TV and therefore I will have to do something about it now.
So can anyone advise whether there are gadgets on the market that will simply broadcast the signal by wireless over that distance, or is it better to lay a TV cable now ? I do not want to have to dig up the new tarmac later.
Thanks for any advice on these two matters.