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Discuss Ring main. in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net
The rear set of butterfly wings are not always smaller the orange sulphur for example have slightly larger rear wings.But the hind wings are much smaller and not considered a lifting wing, they are there to counter balance the movement of the front wings hence the erratic flight, but a Dragonfly can hover.
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The Work of the Devil is Clingfilm or is that the Devil spawn.
I wasn't referring to all non-standard circuits as crap. I'm not hygely in favour of four conductors in a circuit breaker etc. though. So it was this particular arrangement which I was suggesting that many might consider to be crap.Well I called it a butterfly circuit, anybody can call it what they want, no problem. Just like the age old cooker circuit, modified cos cooker not needed so a ring produced from that point, some call that a "lolipop" circuit or a "lassoo" circuit (not implying a cowboy job I hope!). The butterfly or whatever you call it just like the lolipop can be a decent circuit designed using sound engineering judgement and be ok. The fact that they are not easily recognised as standard circuits does nothing to detract from that. It might confuse the unwary a little but you could ask "should they really be adding/modifying these circuits if they do not fully understand what they are doing?". Answer No, they could ask someone who does know though and there is no shame in that. There is no person who knows everything about everything.
I disagree about calling them crap circuits though.
Another example to consider is a radial circuit, be it lighting or power points. You might branch out at some point for instance 1 begats 2 begats 4 begats 8 etc etc, it is still a radial circuit, again with different topology but nonetheless sound (some call them "trees"), in fact you could start it off with two conductors (or more) at the CU and it`s still ok - might be a beggar to test though! - you`d have several ends for Zs. It is up to the designer if they want to create one circuit,
In my example No 2/ is actually better in terms of volt drop and R1 + R2 than example No1 is.
I wasn't referring to all non-standard circuits as crap. I'm not hygely in favour of four conductors in a circuit breaker etc. though. So it was this particular arrangement which I was suggesting that many might consider to be crap.
A ring supplied by a suitably sized radial feeder is something which I have absolutely no difficulty with, even though it is non-standard.
Easy, just the ring of that particular fault. Same as any circuit connected in your consumer unit.So like a dog with a bone I have been thinking about this. I can't quite get my head around EFLI test what route would the current take on such a circuit? If I took it at ring A say, would it go around ring B or just ring A and the substation?
The test would give the most onerous as the answer which should be the 65m ring part of the circuitEasy, just the ring of that particular fault. Same as any circuit connected in your consumer unit.
I never suggested that any of them were unsafe. In fact I specifically stated that the circuit in question was not unsafe unless there was an issue with the connections to the four conductors at the origin.Whatever you label them does not really matter, they are not crap circuits, they may be decent reliable circuits if undertaken properly. The only problem is they are not commonly listed. BS 7671 tells you what to comply with it does not tell you how to comply. So long as you use sound electrical design it complies and is safe. No less so than if you use a bog standard ring or radial.
I can give one example of a circuit that probably does not comply but is nonetheless safe :-
a bog standard ring final circuit B32A MCB with a spur of one twin socket at the origin of the ring i.e from the fuseway. Compliant Yes. Now disconnect the ring but leave the spur in place, so now its a twin socket on a 32a mcb. we would not like the look of it but removal of the ring has not rendered it unsafe has it?
Most likely the whole dwelling.what is the 2 ring mains supplying? 1 bedroom , 2 bedrooms, /// livingroom + kitchen etc?
If it were four radials on a 32 a MCB, its wrong anyway, as a radial curcuit requires a 20a MCB, 2.5 mm wire is only 26 amp rating.!!Unless you have tested it a visual assessment that four conductors equate to two ring final circuits may or may not be correct. It could be four radials, one ring final and two spurs or just all four interconnecting with themselves.
If it were four radials on a 32 a MCB, its wrong anyway, as a radial curcuit requires a 20a MCB, 2.5 mm wire is only 26 amp rating.!!
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