Hi,
I'm a DIY'er, new to this forum.
My situation is, I'm laying a new kitchen ring circuit for my sister. The ring will supply the obvious kitchen appliances including 3kW oven, fan, washing machine, dishwasher, f/f, microwave, toaster, kettle, plus an elec fire at the far end. Potentially an iron. It's unlikely that all those will be on and at full load at the same time, but technically possible. Boiler and hob will be on separate supplies. The ring will have MCB and RCD protection.
In terms of cable and protection, I was going to use the logic of the previous wiring and also the wiring of my own home (which is part p certified and been inspected/tested when I moved in). That is, 32A MCB and 2.5mm cable.
However, I'm confused about how this can be sufficient. Can you explain?
Thanks!
H
I'm a DIY'er, new to this forum.
My situation is, I'm laying a new kitchen ring circuit for my sister. The ring will supply the obvious kitchen appliances including 3kW oven, fan, washing machine, dishwasher, f/f, microwave, toaster, kettle, plus an elec fire at the far end. Potentially an iron. It's unlikely that all those will be on and at full load at the same time, but technically possible. Boiler and hob will be on separate supplies. The ring will have MCB and RCD protection.
In terms of cable and protection, I was going to use the logic of the previous wiring and also the wiring of my own home (which is part p certified and been inspected/tested when I moved in). That is, 32A MCB and 2.5mm cable.
However, I'm confused about how this can be sufficient. Can you explain?
- All those appliances add up to something like 14kW. But if we've got a 32A breaker then doesn't that give a max capacity of 7360W? (I'm confused because surely most kitchens have more than this wattage in them)?
- And the 2.5mm cable, which radially carries 27A or 6.2kW, and could carry 12.4 kW in a ring. But again, surely most kitchens have appliances of more than this without meltdown
Thanks!
H