Contactor for oven | on ElectriciansForums

Discuss Contactor for oven in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

Joined
Sep 13, 2016
Messages
592
Reaction score
51
Location
London
Hi, working on a job, guy wants all appliances on grid switch, the oven needs 32amp supply so best way I can think of is 6mm into contactor 6mm to cooker then 1.0mm from contactor to 20amp DP in grid switch to keep it on grid???
Thing confusing me is the grid is on a 4mm 32amp at the moment and the 6mm will be from a 32amp MCB but that will mean the DP controlling contactor is on one circuit and oven fed between contactor is on another
Thanks
 
"6mm will be from a 32amp MCB but that will mean the DP controlling contactor is on one circuit and oven fed between contactor is on another"

Maybe I'm misunderstanding but isn't that the whole point?
 
Hi, working on a job, guy wants all appliances on grid switch, the oven needs 32amp supply so best way I can think of is 6mm into contactor 6mm to cooker then 1.0mm from contactor to 20amp DP in grid switch to keep it on grid???
Thing confusing me is the grid is on a 4mm 32amp at the moment and the 6mm will be from a 32amp MCB but that will mean the DP controlling contactor is on one circuit and oven fed between contactor is on another
Thanks

That's one of the reasons contactors exist, to be able to use one circuit to control a different circuit without them being linked.

The switch operating the contactor obviously won't be directly connected to the 4mm 32A circuit anyway, you'll have a smaller ocpd protecting the 1.0mm and the contactor won't you?
 
That's one of the reasons contactors exist, to be able to use one circuit to control a different circuit without them being linked.

The switch operating the contactor obviously won't be directly connected to the 4mm 32A circuit anyway, you'll have a smaller ocpd protecting the 1.0mm and the contactor won't you?
The 6mm will be on a 32a MCB so my supply circuit for oven, and the 1.0mm controlling the switching on the contactor was going to come from the 20amp DP in grid switch which is on a 4mm 32amp radial?
[automerge]1575613737[/automerge]
"6mm will be from a 32amp MCB but that will mean the DP controlling contactor is on one circuit and oven fed between contactor is on another"

Maybe I'm misunderstanding but isn't that the whole point?
Yes sorry it’s more to do with the 6mm into contactor and out to oven is on 6mm 32amp MCB then the 20amp DP controlling the contactor is on a 1.0mm but will be on the 4mm 32amp radial for grid switches?
 
The 6mm will be on a 32a MCB so my supply circuit for oven, and the 1.0mm controlling the switching on the contactor was going to come from the 20amp DP in grid switch which is on a 4mm 32amp radial?

There must be another fuse there somewhere, you can't just connect 1.0mm and a contactor directly to a 32A circuit!

Also how often is the customer intending to switch the cooker on and off? I assume you've confirmed they only turn it on to cook and won't be leaving it on 24hours a day? If not then how long do you think that contactor is going to last?
 
There must be another fuse there somewhere, you can't just connect 1.0mm and a contactor directly to a 32A circuit!

Also how often is the customer intending to switch the cooker on and off? I assume you've confirmed they only turn it on to cook and won't be leaving it on 24hours a day? If not then how long do you think that contactor is going to last?
The 1.0mm is only Switching the contactor?
[automerge]1575625330[/automerge]
The 1.0mm is only Switching the contactor?
Through a 20amp DP I’ll use 2.5mm it’s only switch through the DP
 
The 1.0mm is only Switching the contactor?

Yes, but 1.0mm can't be protected by a 32A MCB and your posts so far suggest that this is what will happen.
Also protecting the contactor coil with a 32A MCB is not a good plan either.

Why not fit a 1A fuse or MCB in the enclosure next to the contactor, feed it from the cooker supply and use the 1.0mm from the grid switch as L and S/L?
 
20A switch yes, but isn't it fed from a 32A RFC?
All the grid is on a 4mm radial 32amp in and out each fused appliance the contactor will be switched of the 20amp DP which is on the 4mm radial? With 2.5mm??
[automerge]1575626871[/automerge]
Yes, but 1.0mm can't be protected by a 32A MCB and your posts so far suggest that this is what will happen.
Also protecting the contactor coil with a 32A MCB is not a good plan either.

Why not fit a 1A fuse or MCB in the enclosure next to the contactor, feed it from the cooker supply and use the 1.0mm from the grid switch as L and S/L?
Oh I see so I can’t protect the coil with the 20amp DP fed from 32amp radial?
 
But you said the 1mm contactor coil feed was going to be taken from the RFC. The RFC is protected by a 32A device is it not?
 

Reply to Contactor for oven in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

News and Offers from Sponsors

  • Article
Join us at electronica 2024 in Munich! Since 1964, electronica has been the premier event for technology enthusiasts and industry professionals...
    • Like
Replies
0
Views
381
  • Sticky
  • Article
Good to know thanks, one can never have enough places to source parts from!
Replies
4
Views
959
  • Article
OFFICIAL SPONSORS These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then...
Replies
0
Views
1K

Similar threads

I've put a 2 way unit inside kitchen cupboards before now if we were re-using the original cooker supply but the customer wanted 2 x 16A ovens. I...
Replies
8
Views
438
Check the clearance between the back panel and/or terminal cover that you've removed. Look for small burn marks.
Replies
3
Views
499

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Electrician Courses Green Electrical Goods PCB Way Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Pushfit Wire Connectors Electric Underfloor Heating Electrician Courses
These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then CLICK HERE and post a thread with who you are, and we'll send you some stats etc

YOUR Unread Posts

This website was designed, optimised and is hosted by untold.media Operating under the name Untold Media since 2001.
Back
Top