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Discuss Cable zones on a staircase in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net
AFAIK the 150mm zones are formed from vertical corners and where the wall meets the ceiling, not lower wall perimeters where they meet a floor or rising staircase.I was talking about safe zones at the perimeter of a wall, that follows the edge regardless of the plane it is on, if you run under the staircase for instance you can follow the diagonal to 100mm and comply, above with the skirting takes you out of that zone hence my alternate take on this.
It is not defined though, different bodies reccomend their own policies, it is not just wall/ ceiling but a wall/wall meeting point so a plane or angle is not ever denoted thus shaped rooms that don't meet a box can follow the rules.AFAIK the 150mm zones are formed from vertical corners and where the wall meets the ceiling, not lower wall perimeters where they meet a floor or rising staircase.
It is not defined though, different bodies reccomend their own policies, it is not just wall/ ceiling but a wall/wall meeting point so a plane or angle is not ever denoted thus shaped rooms that don't meet a box can follow the rules.
Where I suggest the topside may comply was if the staircase was boxed in IE a cupboard under the staircase which applies to many examples, that would then make the top side effectively the floor of the wall, only where the staircase is open plan would I say the floor remains under the staircase, in my opinion I see the staircase as part of the buildings structure and not like say a built in cupboard or a wall unit etc so if it is boxed in it effectively has the floor on its top side which then allows you a given small corridor to run cables up.I'll have to disagree I'm afraid. The wording of the reg says a zone can be "within 150mm of an angle formed by two adjoining walls or partitions." I don't see how this can apply to any other surface such as a floor or where a staircase covers a wall forming an angle. The underside of a staircase covered so as to form a ceiling I could see could form a zone, but not above a staircase as their is no partition.
I do agree that the zones described in 522.6.202 are not always square or fit into a neat "block" though and these zones can be sloped or a variety of combination of angles.
In the case in this thread I do agree that directly between light fittings would be a reasonable route to assume the cables take, but don't see that it would be currently compliant.
Reply to Cable zones on a staircase in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net