Evening..
I have a seperate oven and hob to fit.
The oven is 2.6kW, the hob is 3kW. I have fitted 4mm flex to the oven and the hob comes prewired with 2.5mm.
Zs on the cooker circuit is 0.2Ω making the PFC 1150A.
I was planning on connecting both to a dual cooker outlet plate fed by a 32A MCB (as reg 433.3.1(ii) shows that I can omit over current protection). However reg 433.3.1(ii) also states that it must be protected against fault current (hence reg 434.5.2).
In this example
t=0.1s
K=115
S=2.5mm
I=1150A
meaning that K²S² < I²t so the 2.5mm conductor may breach its permitted limiting temperature during a fault.
A couple of questions:
1. It would be common to have a 2.5mm radial circuit on a 20A MCB (I could even reduce the MCB on the above circuit to 20A) but if the Zs was 0.2Ω as above it would still not have adequate fault protection as K²S² < I²t??
2. If the Zs was higher (anything over 0.26Ω in the above example) then K²S² > I²t and the 2.5mm would not breach it limiting temperature in case of a fault, so it seems better to have a higher resistance!! Which doesn't make sense?
I have a seperate oven and hob to fit.
The oven is 2.6kW, the hob is 3kW. I have fitted 4mm flex to the oven and the hob comes prewired with 2.5mm.
Zs on the cooker circuit is 0.2Ω making the PFC 1150A.
I was planning on connecting both to a dual cooker outlet plate fed by a 32A MCB (as reg 433.3.1(ii) shows that I can omit over current protection). However reg 433.3.1(ii) also states that it must be protected against fault current (hence reg 434.5.2).
In this example
t=0.1s
K=115
S=2.5mm
I=1150A
meaning that K²S² < I²t so the 2.5mm conductor may breach its permitted limiting temperature during a fault.
A couple of questions:
1. It would be common to have a 2.5mm radial circuit on a 20A MCB (I could even reduce the MCB on the above circuit to 20A) but if the Zs was 0.2Ω as above it would still not have adequate fault protection as K²S² < I²t??
2. If the Zs was higher (anything over 0.26Ω in the above example) then K²S² > I²t and the 2.5mm would not breach it limiting temperature in case of a fault, so it seems better to have a higher resistance!! Which doesn't make sense?
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