Hi,
I am a keen DIYer and eager to learn.
I have just moved into a house that has a solid ring 6 kw electric hob and built in single oven.
I want to replace both and I have bought a Beko Single Oven and a Induction hob.
Currently the old hob is connected to a 13A plug plugged into a socket in one of the cabinets and the hob looks directly wired into the mains (looks like Twin & Earth cable). They seem to be on a separate circuit as there is a switch on the CU that when flicked cuts out both the oven and the hob.
The new oven is also a single over that is 13A, so I see no reason why I can't just plug this into the socket the same as the other one.
As for the hob...well it seems that it can be wired in as single phase and double phase and it has 5 wires (L1, L2, 2 N sleeved together and Earth). The manual says it is 32A / 16A x 2 so I am assuming that the 32A refers to the single phase and the 16A x 2 refers to double phase.
Now my question is... the old hob is 6 kw and only has 3 wires (L, N & E) so it must be single phase, so presumably there is no reason why I can't swap out the old for the new 7.2 kw in a single phase configuration?
If so, can I just use a 16A junction box to connect the wire from the new hob (L1 & L2 together, the 2 N's together and the Earth) to the mains cable (L, N & E).
Another question is, on the surface of it, it seems like a simple job that I could do myself, or should I really get an electrician in?
Any help or guidance would be very much appreciated.
Many thanks,
Bren.
I am a keen DIYer and eager to learn.
I have just moved into a house that has a solid ring 6 kw electric hob and built in single oven.
I want to replace both and I have bought a Beko Single Oven and a Induction hob.
Currently the old hob is connected to a 13A plug plugged into a socket in one of the cabinets and the hob looks directly wired into the mains (looks like Twin & Earth cable). They seem to be on a separate circuit as there is a switch on the CU that when flicked cuts out both the oven and the hob.
The new oven is also a single over that is 13A, so I see no reason why I can't just plug this into the socket the same as the other one.
As for the hob...well it seems that it can be wired in as single phase and double phase and it has 5 wires (L1, L2, 2 N sleeved together and Earth). The manual says it is 32A / 16A x 2 so I am assuming that the 32A refers to the single phase and the 16A x 2 refers to double phase.
Now my question is... the old hob is 6 kw and only has 3 wires (L, N & E) so it must be single phase, so presumably there is no reason why I can't swap out the old for the new 7.2 kw in a single phase configuration?
If so, can I just use a 16A junction box to connect the wire from the new hob (L1 & L2 together, the 2 N's together and the Earth) to the mains cable (L, N & E).
Another question is, on the surface of it, it seems like a simple job that I could do myself, or should I really get an electrician in?
Any help or guidance would be very much appreciated.
Many thanks,
Bren.