lozarus
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Good afternoon - apologies if I'm overthinking this, but I was hoping I could put this out there for consideration.
Scenario is as thus. Picture a small corridor, suspended ceiling with 6x 600x600 T8 fittings in the grid. 1x fitting is a maintained EML.
All fittings are fed from Klik roses above the ceiling. The Kliks are mounted in BESA boxes in an existing 3/4" imperial steel conduit system, which has had new sinlges drawn through in the past. The Emergency is fed from a 4 pin Klik, with the 4th pin being permenant live. Klik flexes are 0.75mmsq, with a 4 core 0.75mmsq flex for the emergency. The Supply is from 10a B Type RCBO. - all in good order.
The 600x600's are to be replaced with 4x LED panels for a combination of reasons. Instead of using an emergency pack for a panel, the proposal would be to use a non-maintained self testing emergency bulkhead fitted adjacent. This matches the general setup elsewhere and makes it easier for the non-technical staff who oversee monthly testing.
It crossed my mind that as opposed to butchering the conduit system, an option here could be to fit a Wagobox to the 4 core 0.75mm flex from the 4 pin Klik rose, breaking out to a short 15cm run of 2 core 0.75mmsq to to the panel driver from the switch live in the wagobox, and another short run of 3 core 0.75mmsq to the emergency light (picking up the permenant live in the wagobox).
My thought here was about current carrying capacity of the 0.75 / the fact it's now feeding 2x fittings whilst backed up by that 10a RCBO. Whilst I appreciate table 4F3A tells us 0.75 is good for 6a, but is widely acknowledged as being acceptable for being a final connection to a light fitting, I just wonder if it would be seen as bad practice using it to technically supply 2 from one rose whilst backed up by that B10? The entire load will obviously be vastly reduced on the flex - but it still made me think.
Please tell me if this is overthought / boring.
Scenario is as thus. Picture a small corridor, suspended ceiling with 6x 600x600 T8 fittings in the grid. 1x fitting is a maintained EML.
All fittings are fed from Klik roses above the ceiling. The Kliks are mounted in BESA boxes in an existing 3/4" imperial steel conduit system, which has had new sinlges drawn through in the past. The Emergency is fed from a 4 pin Klik, with the 4th pin being permenant live. Klik flexes are 0.75mmsq, with a 4 core 0.75mmsq flex for the emergency. The Supply is from 10a B Type RCBO. - all in good order.
The 600x600's are to be replaced with 4x LED panels for a combination of reasons. Instead of using an emergency pack for a panel, the proposal would be to use a non-maintained self testing emergency bulkhead fitted adjacent. This matches the general setup elsewhere and makes it easier for the non-technical staff who oversee monthly testing.
It crossed my mind that as opposed to butchering the conduit system, an option here could be to fit a Wagobox to the 4 core 0.75mm flex from the 4 pin Klik rose, breaking out to a short 15cm run of 2 core 0.75mmsq to to the panel driver from the switch live in the wagobox, and another short run of 3 core 0.75mmsq to the emergency light (picking up the permenant live in the wagobox).
My thought here was about current carrying capacity of the 0.75 / the fact it's now feeding 2x fittings whilst backed up by that 10a RCBO. Whilst I appreciate table 4F3A tells us 0.75 is good for 6a, but is widely acknowledged as being acceptable for being a final connection to a light fitting, I just wonder if it would be seen as bad practice using it to technically supply 2 from one rose whilst backed up by that B10? The entire load will obviously be vastly reduced on the flex - but it still made me think.
Please tell me if this is overthought / boring.