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Klik plugs are rated at 6 amp with 075mm flex.

But I have seen them used on 10 amp breakers in shops and the like with the plug in Rose's and with the Marshallling boxs?

How does that work if the plug is only 6 amp

Is it due to the flex length being so short or something else?
 
Klik plugs are rated at 6 amp with 075mm flex.

But I have seen them used on 10 amp breakers in shops and the like with the plug in Rose's and with the Marshallling boxs?

How does that work if the plug is only 6 amp

Is it due to the flex length being so short or something else?

But the load that the Klik plugs are supplying will be less than 6A presumably?
 
Last edited:
Klik plugs are rated at 6 amp with 075mm flex.

But I have seen them used on 10 amp breakers in shops and the like with the plug in Rose's and with the Marshallling boxs?

How does that work if the plug is only 6 amp

Is it due to the flex length being so short or something else?
Anyone actually checked the actual loading, or is the the question theoretical?
 
You can wire pendant sets to 16A lighting circuits and they are only rated 2A! There is a regulation mentioning 0.75mm flex being suitable for connecting lights to lighting circuits with circuit protection rated above the CCC of the flex. But I'm too lazy/tired right now to find it...
 
But the load that the Klik plugs are supplying will be less than 6A presumably?
Anyone actually checked the actual loading, or is the the question theoretical?

Theoretical.....the load would be a lights off each klik point on a circuit of say 10 lights

So the total load would be way less than 6 amps at anyone point. Or even in total

My question is then is they only need to be rated for the drawn load not the load that the breaker could supply
 
Theoretical.....the load would be a lights off each klik point on a circuit of say 10 lights

So the total load would be way less than 6 amps at anyone point. Or even in total

My question is then is they only need to be rated for the drawn load not the load that the breaker could supply

Think of a single 13A socket fed from a 32A MCB.
 
some light switches used to come marked 6amp max , yet would be used on 10a and even 16a circuits.
again it’s just a case of being pragmatic about what you are connecting to the light switch or klik plug...
 
Every lighting pendant uses 0.75mm cable from the rose to the lamp holder.
I too think there is a reg on this. I too CBA to go and find it!
[automerge]1597048860[/automerge]
Every lighting pendant uses 0.75mm cable from the rose to the lamp holder.
I too think there is a reg on this. I too CBA to go and find it!
I did find it! but it is not in BS7671. It is specified in BS EN 60598 – the applicable British and European standard for lights – this requires cable to be at least 0.75mm² for light fittings. So thats what we get - the least!
 
Last edited:
Sorry to bump but I still can't understand this or its just driving me nuts

So a rated at 6 amp 0.75 klik plug flex connected into a marshaling box supplying a light can be used on a 10 amp circuit breaker :/
 
You can wire pendant sets to 16A lighting circuits and they are only rated 2A! There is a regulation mentioning 0.75mm flex being suitable for connecting lights to lighting circuits with circuit protection rated above the CCC of the flex. But I'm too lazy/tired right now to find it...


But it is supplying a fixed load that will be less than the capacity of the plug or flex.

Every lighting pendant uses 0.75mm cable from the rose to the lamp holder.
I too think there is a reg on this. I too CBA to go and find it!
[automerge]1597048860[/automerge]

I did find it! but it is not in BS7671. It is specified in BS EN 60598 – the applicable British and European standard for lights – this requires cable to be at least 0.75mm² for light fittings. So thats what we get - the least!
Sorry to bump but I still can't understand this or its just driving me nuts

So a rated at 6 amp 0.75 klik plug flex connected into a marshaling box supplying a light can be used on a 10 amp circuit breaker :/
 

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