I read that it is against the regs that a ring final circuit cannot be just a ring with with spurs off it. In short, a ring must have sockets on it which double up as junctions. I find that hard to believe.
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Discuss Ring Final Circuit - spurs only in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net
Sockets are not for permanently used appliances. They are to be plugged in and out. Permanently wired in appliance need to be hard wired. And that in theory includes a 24/7/365 fridge.
So why do some manufacturers consider removal of the plug from the socket is safe isolation of the appliance when they need to carry out warranty work. Back to the old you can't cut the plug off without voiding the warranty debateSockets are not for permanently used appliances. They are to be plugged in and out. Permanently wired in appliance need to be hard wired. And that in theory includes a 24/7/365 fridge.
I used to believe this too. I don't know if it was included in the 15th or 16th edition, but there's no mention of it in BS7671:2018+Amd2:2022 (at least as far as I can see).From memory this was apart of the 16th Edition OSG at least.
The point is a ring without sockets, either with for e.g., having only jboxes or appliances hard wired on the ring. Why the jbooxes are there or why the appliance are hard wired in is not the point. It is a regs point.
So why do some manufacturers consider removal of the plug from the socket is safe isolation of the appliance when they need to carry out warranty work
A dedicated ring for only heavy appliances, hard wired in comes to mind. Sockets on a separate ring.
Whatever standard and non-standard are.And a very early answer was "yes, but it would be non-standard"
It's in the OSG, H4. Not sure I understand the reasoning behind it thoughI used to believe this too. I don't know if it was included in the 15th or 16th edition, but there's no mention of it in BS7671:2018+Amd2:2022 (at least as far as I can see).
Really that was the point I was making to the post I quoted to see what response SJW would post as a replyBecause it is a safe method of isolation, you can't get more isolated than fully disconnected.
Whatever standard and non-standard are.
Sockets are not for permanently used appliances. They are to be plugged in and out. Permanently wired in appliance need to be hard wired. And that in theory includes a 24/7/365 fridge.
Yep. Some fridges use 750 watt. That needs hard wiring.And then, when the homeowner needs a new fridge, he has to get a sparky out to disconnect the old one and reconnect the new one.
Makes perfect sense to use a plug, especially since it will come with a pre fitted one.
MF jboxes.Assuming the average ring circuit has 10 sockets on it and you save 3m of cable per socket that's a saving of 30m of cable.
At current prices that could be about £25 saved.
Depending on your preference for joint boxes they could realistically cost you £25.
Then you need to consider the additional time involved.
Other considerations are best practice, it is generally accepted that best practice is to avoid unnecessary joints in cables, every joint being a potential point of failure.
Also you need to consider maintainence and fault finding, it is going to be a lot harder to fault find a ring circuit where you can't readily get to the ring itself.
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