Shaver Socket from a Ring Final | on ElectriciansForums

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Hi All,

A customer has asked for a shaver socket to be installed in his bathroom.

The only issue is that there is no lighting circuit available (loft conversion above and no access to the eaves).

His idea was to come off a socket in a bedroom on the other side of a stud wall to the proposed location.

I'm assuming its a ring final.

My first thought was - yeah - but I'll have to put a fused spur.

Then I thought - wait a minute - shaver sockets are 230 volts anyway - and have their own inbuilt thermistor to trip at only 200mA.

I can't see any regulation or design problem that enforces the need for the fused spur - so I could just run a 2.5mm or even a 1.5mm to it? Its not a fixed load as such, it can't be overloaded.....

Bad practice?
I am wondering what others would do?

I suggested a mirror light with integrated shaver scocket - which are SELV - now that I would fuse down because the light is a fixed load...
 
You could run a flex all the way from the shaver socket and put a fused spur in the bedroom and you’ll have your point of safety - you could make it an RCD fuse spur if the RFC isn’t protected.
 
You could run a flex all the way from the shaver socket and put a fused spur in the bedroom and you’ll have your point of safety - you could make it an RCD fuse spur if the RFC isn’t protected.

Thanks for the reply. Its a standard RCD protected split board.

Routing the cable should be OK - the bedroom socket is literally on the other side of the wall - just need a bit of luck with studs and noggins etc. I think I'm wondering whether I need to fuse it down....
 
I'd err on the side of caution and use an FCU fused right down to 3 amp.
 
Is the purpose of the thermister to limit the output of the isolating transformer by restricting the primary current although I can see where you are coming from. My issue is the accessory does not comply to BS1363 which according to App 15 which I realise is advisory does not make it suitable for direct connection to a ring final circuit.
 
My issue is the accessory does not comply to BS1363 which according to App 15 which I realise is advisory does not make it suitable for direct connection to a ring final circuit.

That makes sense. I can see it now at the top of Appendix 15 - as you say - references BS1363 only. That’s good enough for me, advisory or otherwise.

3 amp fused spur it is .

I still don’t think I would code it on an EICR though, and come to think of it I have seen the spurred direct of a ring arrangement during an accessory swap for someone - I didn’t bat an eyelid at the time....

Thanks all.
 
Hi All,

A customer has asked for a shaver socket to be installed in his bathroom.

The only issue is that there is no lighting circuit available (loft conversion above and no access to the eaves).

His idea was to come off a socket in a bedroom on the other side of a stud wall to the proposed location.

I'm assuming its a ring final.

My first thought was - yeah - but I'll have to put a fused spur.

Then I thought - wait a minute - shaver sockets are 230 volts anyway - and have their own inbuilt thermistor to trip at only 200mA.

I can't see any regulation or design problem that enforces the need for the fused spur - so I could just run a 2.5mm or even a 1.5mm to it? Its not a fixed load as such, it can't be overloaded.....

Bad practice?
I am wondering what others would do?

I suggested a mirror light with integrated shaver scocket - which are SELV - now that I would fuse down because the light is a fixed load...

Interesting question, MK has a pdf of the MIs here, they look a bit dated and generic (isolated/non isolated, red-black wires) but presumably they're still valid. It says this about the mains supply..

5. Isolated shaver supply units should be connected to a mains supply protected by an MCB or fuse of 10 amps maximum rating, such as lighting circuit, or alternatively to a fused connection unit that complies with BS1363: Part 4 supplied from a ring circuit.

So it looks like a fused spur is required to meet the 10A protection spec.
 

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