SWA Cable for run between switched fuse isolator and consumer unit | on ElectriciansForums

Discuss SWA Cable for run between switched fuse isolator and consumer unit in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

srmoore72

-
DIY
Joined
Apr 19, 2015
Messages
6
Reaction score
0
Location
harpenden
Hi all,
I am looking to replace an existing CU (ground floor) and put it in a new position (first floor).
The existing CU is on the inside of a wall to the meter cabinet (which is on the other - external - side of the wall).
The existing cabling between these two devices is not SWA/armoured. (the cable runs through the wall so there is no risk of mechanical damage).

The proposal is to install a new CU in a location which is approx 6m from the external electric meter.
I appreciate that a CU which is distance greater than 3m from the meter cabinet, needs to have a switched fuse in between.

This cable will be routed within a stud wall - so no risk of mechanical damage.

It has been suggested that the cabling from the (internally mounted) switched fuse and the new (internal) consumer unit should be SWA - however I cannot find any regulations stating that this cable should be SWA and that suitably sized T&E cannot be used?
Can anyone offer guidance?


Thank you
Scott
 
If it is only 60A then 16mm T&E can be used if not at mechanical risk, but not if it is buried < 50mm from a wall surface as then it needs 30mA RCD protection (which is incompatible with a reliable CU supply due to the accumulated leakage of all circuits) or it needs some form of protection against being penetrated by a nail, etc, and causing a shock hazard. SWA fits that bill.

However, SWA has a limited bend radius so is quite hard to wrangle through any wall, etc.
 
If it is only 60A then 16mm T&E can be used if not at mechanical risk, but not if it is buried < 50mm from a wall surface as then it needs 30mA RCD protection (which is incompatible with a reliable CU supply due to the accumulated leakage of all circuits) or it needs some form of protection against being penetrated by a nail, etc, and causing a shock hazard. SWA fits that bill.

However, SWA has a limited bend radius so is quite hard to wrangle through any wall, etc.
Hi pc1966
Thank you for your information.
The CU is rated at 100A - but to follow on from your information - the cable will be deeper than 50mm from the wall surface.
That should negate the requirement for RCD protection and SWA.

Understood about the bend radius limitations for SWA -

many thanks!
S
 
If the likely demand is anywhere near 100A then 16mm T&E is not an adequate solution. Typically it is fed off a 60A fused-switch for that sort of a reason.

If you need more current and, again, do not have a cable penetration risk then you might look at separate 16mm CPC along with some 25mm 19-strand flexible sheathed tails, though you would have to find someone who seels that by the metre as usual packs are 1m or 3m lengths.
 
Looks to me like a 16mm cable in a wall < 50mm certainly does not leave much structural strength left unless it is a solid wall. I don't think I would feel happy if the cable were not protected, even an SWA cable would not stop a nail & chances are any fixings to a wall surface over 6M in length may become live & you may not know it. I'm thinking of future proving the house for other tenants that would not be aware of the cable run.
 
Hi 1966 what do you mean by this?
Well if you have a 30mA RCD then your goal is typically to keep the "normal" leakage below 9mA (30% of rating, as normal trip threshold is 50-100% of rating) so there is less risk of it tripping for no good reason. Once you have a house of cables and various electronic devices it is easy to exceed that amount.

Furthermore if that incoming RCD trips everything goes off, which is not good from a safety point of view due to no lights, maybe while cooking and hot appliances nearby, etc.

Those are the reasons most installations moved to a dual-RCD board, and in recent years to all-RCBO as their cost came down. You distribute the normal leakage over multiple RCD/RCBOs so less risk of nuisance trips, and you reduce the impact of a fault down to (in the RCBO case) only the faulted circuit.
 
Well if you have a 30mA RCD then your goal is typically to keep the "normal" leakage below 9mA (30% of rating, as normal trip threshold is 50-100% of rating) so there is less risk of it tripping for no good reason. Once you have a house of cables and various electronic devices it is easy to exceed that amount.

Furthermore if that incoming RCD trips everything goes off, which is not good from a safety point of view due to no lights, maybe while cooking and hot appliances nearby, etc.

Those are the reasons most installations moved to a dual-RCD board, and in recent years to all-RCBO as their cost came down. You distribute the normal leakage over multiple RCD/RCBOs so less risk of nuisance trips, and you reduce the impact of a fault down to (in the RCBO case) only the faulted circuit.
Thanks for the explanation i didn't know what you meant by it being incompatible with a CU supply
 
Looks to me like a 16mm cable in a wall < 50mm certainly does not leave much structural strength left unless it is a solid wall. I don't think I would feel happy if the cable were not protected, even an SWA cable would not stop a nail & chances are any fixings to a wall surface over 6M in length may become live & you may not know it. I'm thinking of future proving the house for other tenants that would not be aware of the cable run.
You would be very unlucky to hit the live conductor without hitting the armour first using swa.
 

Reply to SWA Cable for run between switched fuse isolator and consumer unit in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

News and Offers from Sponsors

  • Article
Join us at electronica 2024 in Munich! Since 1964, electronica has been the premier event for technology enthusiasts and industry professionals...
    • Like
Replies
0
Views
159
  • Sticky
  • Article
Good to know thanks, one can never have enough places to source parts from!
Replies
4
Views
526
  • Article
OFFICIAL SPONSORS These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then...
Replies
0
Views
474

Similar threads

I might have got lost here, but the rotary iso is rated at 63A so 25mm armoured still wouldn't make the install satisfactory. Assuming everything...
Replies
7
Views
466
I would hazard a guess your electrician may be able to contact your DNO and have the switch swapped to a MFS very quickly..
Replies
13
Views
609

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Electrician Courses Green Electrical Goods PCB Way Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Pushfit Wire Connectors Electric Underfloor Heating Electrician Courses
These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then CLICK HERE and post a thread with who you are, and we'll send you some stats etc

YOUR Unread Posts

This website was designed, optimised and is hosted by untold.media Operating under the name Untold Media since 2001.
Back
Top