O
oldvic
Hi. Sorry to trouble everyone, but I'm desperately in need of informed advice.
We recently moved house. Our new place has a Diplomat (MFI) single oven that needs replacing. That oven is just plugged in to an ordinary twin 13-amp socket at the back of the adjacent kitchen unit. The other socket is used for the electric ignition on a gas hob.
My problem is that virtually all the possible replacement ovens are specified as needing hard-wiring.
The twin 13-amp socket was installed by MFI when they re-fitted the kitchen a few years back. It's fed from a pre-existing worktop-height cooker control unit that has both an on/off switch for the cooker and a separate 13 amp socket. That control unit is itself fed by a dedicated 32 amp circuit from the consumer unit.
My question is: how should the new cooker be hard-wired? Would it be OK to replace the existing twin 13-amp socket with a new cooker control unit, including a 13-amp socket for the hob ignition? That would mean having two cooker control units in series -- the original one from before the kitchen refit, and the new one. Is there any problem with that? And is there a better alternative? (All the existing cabling is buried away, and the run from the original cooker control unit to the twin 13-amp socket is about two metres and round a corner. So taking the new cooker cable all the way back to the original cooker control unit doesn't look like a feasible option. And we'd be left short of a 13-amp socket for the hob ignition.)
I've tried all sorts of web searches, but all the results have been less than helpful. Hence this post on this forum. Thanks in advance for any help you can give.
We recently moved house. Our new place has a Diplomat (MFI) single oven that needs replacing. That oven is just plugged in to an ordinary twin 13-amp socket at the back of the adjacent kitchen unit. The other socket is used for the electric ignition on a gas hob.
My problem is that virtually all the possible replacement ovens are specified as needing hard-wiring.
The twin 13-amp socket was installed by MFI when they re-fitted the kitchen a few years back. It's fed from a pre-existing worktop-height cooker control unit that has both an on/off switch for the cooker and a separate 13 amp socket. That control unit is itself fed by a dedicated 32 amp circuit from the consumer unit.
My question is: how should the new cooker be hard-wired? Would it be OK to replace the existing twin 13-amp socket with a new cooker control unit, including a 13-amp socket for the hob ignition? That would mean having two cooker control units in series -- the original one from before the kitchen refit, and the new one. Is there any problem with that? And is there a better alternative? (All the existing cabling is buried away, and the run from the original cooker control unit to the twin 13-amp socket is about two metres and round a corner. So taking the new cooker cable all the way back to the original cooker control unit doesn't look like a feasible option. And we'd be left short of a 13-amp socket for the hob ignition.)
I've tried all sorts of web searches, but all the results have been less than helpful. Hence this post on this forum. Thanks in advance for any help you can give.