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At a house viewing I saw a dozen electric radiators connected mainly by plugs into wall sockets, one or two (in bathrooms) connected to fused spurs. I calculated nearly 14Kw and I'm given to understand all these rads are connected to either of two ring mains with 32A breakers.

A quick look at the consumer unit showed all the powerful stuff on dedicated circuits, apart from washing machine, tumble dryer, dishwasher, steam oven, so these must be plugged into one or other of the two ring mains. There was no dedicated circuit for the electric rads.

I know you can have unlimited sockets for a floor area > 100m2, but I would have thought all those rads on a cold winter's day would cause tripping? I'm looking at having to re-wire if I go ahead with the house, unless anyone disagrees?

Cheers
 
Thanks for the suggestions, some good ones there. CU might be the best bet, though space is a little limited. I also thought you needed to avoid close proximity to other conductors as that might affect the magnetic field. I'll go for the cheap clamp meter off Amazon and experiment - though as I say there's been no tripping at all so far even with the system under reasonably high load (I'm not looking forward to the bill though..)
 
Thanks for the suggestions, some good ones there. CU might be the best bet, though space is a little limited. I also thought you needed to avoid close proximity to other conductors as that might affect the magnetic field. I'll go for the cheap clamp meter off Amazon and experiment - though as I say there's been no tripping at all so far even with the system under reasonably high load (I'm not looking forward to the bill though..)
This is what you need, might find one on ebay, I still have mine.
http://www.biddlemegger.com/biddle-ug/Flexiclamp_200_UG.pdf
 
. I also thought you needed to avoid close proximity to other conductors as that might affect the magnetic field. .)

The single conductor that you measure is enclosed by the meter clamp jaws. So other influences are not a problemo.
 
Thanks again for the suggestions, I'll have a look at the Flexiclamp.
Yes that's right about the 'efficiency' claims. I got the impression that Haverland were suggesting they could produce more heat per amp, but how you would measure that I'm not sure, without some sort of comparison. They certainly chuck out the heat and no-one's been cold, but as I say we'll see what the elec bill is like before celebrating.
 
Individual conductors available in every socket. on a ring final the same current(ish) will be at every socket.
But there’s usually room for a clamp meter in the CU, One of the line conductors going into the MCB Is the usual place. There’s usually a short loop at that point.

There’s an obvious problem with this suggestion, and other methods of measurement are safer to carry out.
 
While is still cold ,could become a human smart meter , taking two readings 6 hours apart , when you think its the coldest !
( dress appropriately - It's not one of those reality torture shows)
..we will not know the Volts for sure .....,
but have a 10% guess at amps average
 
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