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...
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...