Hi all,
Recently a mate had a new kitchen fitted, he's gone for an induction hob and pyrolytic oven, no gas at the property. At 1st fix a single 32A 6mm supply was installed to run both the oven and hob, the electrician already knew the exact specs of the appliances to be installed, and no issues there, with diversity both appliances are under 32A.
For info, the hob (neff T46FD53X2) is 6.9kW, the oven (neff B2ACH7HH0B) is 2.99kW.
So for the connection of the appliances the kitchen fitters 'electrician' has connected a click cooker switch with socket to the 6mm cable that comes from the above counter isolator. This has been shoved under the plinth with the 6mm cable and the hob cable just going through a rough hole in the (brittle) plastic backbox, so no cable restraint- first issue I think.
Then the oven cable has had a plug fitted and it's been plugged into the socket on the front of the cooker switch unit.
In my DIY opinion this isn't a good way of doing it. I would probably have expected a dual outlet plate to be used. However, having looked at the oven tech specs it may be the case that the oven should be protected by a 13A fuse, but I don't really like this as it's running at its max so can see the plug and fuse getting quite hot with the oven being on for a while for a Sunday roast or whatever.
So would please appreciate your views on whether the way they've been connected is acceptable?
And also your interpretation of whether the oven does actually need to be protected by a 13A fuse or would it be ok just on the 32A breaker?
And also depending on whether or not a 13A fuse is required, what's a better way of connecting them?
Thanks, and sorry for the long post!
Recently a mate had a new kitchen fitted, he's gone for an induction hob and pyrolytic oven, no gas at the property. At 1st fix a single 32A 6mm supply was installed to run both the oven and hob, the electrician already knew the exact specs of the appliances to be installed, and no issues there, with diversity both appliances are under 32A.
For info, the hob (neff T46FD53X2) is 6.9kW, the oven (neff B2ACH7HH0B) is 2.99kW.
So for the connection of the appliances the kitchen fitters 'electrician' has connected a click cooker switch with socket to the 6mm cable that comes from the above counter isolator. This has been shoved under the plinth with the 6mm cable and the hob cable just going through a rough hole in the (brittle) plastic backbox, so no cable restraint- first issue I think.
Then the oven cable has had a plug fitted and it's been plugged into the socket on the front of the cooker switch unit.
In my DIY opinion this isn't a good way of doing it. I would probably have expected a dual outlet plate to be used. However, having looked at the oven tech specs it may be the case that the oven should be protected by a 13A fuse, but I don't really like this as it's running at its max so can see the plug and fuse getting quite hot with the oven being on for a while for a Sunday roast or whatever.
So would please appreciate your views on whether the way they've been connected is acceptable?
And also your interpretation of whether the oven does actually need to be protected by a 13A fuse or would it be ok just on the 32A breaker?
And also depending on whether or not a 13A fuse is required, what's a better way of connecting them?
Thanks, and sorry for the long post!