This isn't sitting right with me.
So if I rock up at a house with a 60A suppliers fuse, it has a dear old Wylex with
1 RFC 30A (no diversity)
1 Cooker 30A (no data to hand, plate has socket, assuming 21.6A for now)
1 Shower 30A (7.5Kw - full rating)
2 Lighting 5A ( 21 points total * 100w * 0.6 = 6A ish)
Using OSG method its fairly clearly stuffed by RFC and Shower before I start isn't it?!
30+21.6+30+6=87A
The thing is there is only ONE person living there, there isn't a tumble drier or a dishwasher, it's mostly LED lights, and they can hardly be using all four hobs with a roast in the oven while having a shower and using a hair dryer at the same moment. In this particular case the calculation seems way over the top.
I'm erring on C3 for this noting current use is mitigating factor.
Would this situation bother anyone enough to C2 it for max demand, as there are no signs at all of thermal damage or overload issues. I also can't help thinking the OSG method doesn't take account of increasingly efficient appliances, LED lighting etc.
The regs say in section 3 that max demand shall be determined, and the suitability of the supply for the requirements of the installation, including max demand shall be determined by measurement, enquiry or inspection. Does anyone ever use a method other than the OSG way? For example it looks as though measuring demand for a week and looking at peaks and average would be acceptable to BS7671. Can smart meters help here?!
Thanks for thoughts - I do realise that if the house is sold the situation could dramatically change.
So if I rock up at a house with a 60A suppliers fuse, it has a dear old Wylex with
1 RFC 30A (no diversity)
1 Cooker 30A (no data to hand, plate has socket, assuming 21.6A for now)
1 Shower 30A (7.5Kw - full rating)
2 Lighting 5A ( 21 points total * 100w * 0.6 = 6A ish)
Using OSG method its fairly clearly stuffed by RFC and Shower before I start isn't it?!
30+21.6+30+6=87A
The thing is there is only ONE person living there, there isn't a tumble drier or a dishwasher, it's mostly LED lights, and they can hardly be using all four hobs with a roast in the oven while having a shower and using a hair dryer at the same moment. In this particular case the calculation seems way over the top.
I'm erring on C3 for this noting current use is mitigating factor.
Would this situation bother anyone enough to C2 it for max demand, as there are no signs at all of thermal damage or overload issues. I also can't help thinking the OSG method doesn't take account of increasingly efficient appliances, LED lighting etc.
The regs say in section 3 that max demand shall be determined, and the suitability of the supply for the requirements of the installation, including max demand shall be determined by measurement, enquiry or inspection. Does anyone ever use a method other than the OSG way? For example it looks as though measuring demand for a week and looking at peaks and average would be acceptable to BS7671. Can smart meters help here?!
Thanks for thoughts - I do realise that if the house is sold the situation could dramatically change.