Hi all,
Our kitchen is going to be ripped out and replaced in the new year, and currently has just one small oven in it - I have 10 guests for Christmas dinner and it ain't going to be up to the job!
However, I already have two new built in single ovens delivered but uninstalled and a carcass from the new kitchen that I can put them in temporarily to make them usable.
My thinking is that there whilst not at all acceptable as a permanent solution, there should be no problem with me pulling the front of the existing FSU (40a cable and 32a MCB protection in place back to CU), and putting in a couple of cables on the load side with 16a commando sockets on them, and then 16a plugs on the ovens. I know the ovens will not exceed 16a and will be unlikely to even exceed 13a as I won't be using the grill element, I assume there is also a reasonable headway included in the 16a rating.
Or... Am I overthinking this and could make it even simpler by just plugging them into standard 13a sockets on two seperate RFC's using a 13a plug on each? If it doesn't blow the fuse... and I really doubt it would, is there an technical reason this would not be safe?
It goes without saying that whatever the temp solution, I'll be with the ovens the entire time they're used and would give them a test run ahead of the day.
Thoughts?
Our kitchen is going to be ripped out and replaced in the new year, and currently has just one small oven in it - I have 10 guests for Christmas dinner and it ain't going to be up to the job!
However, I already have two new built in single ovens delivered but uninstalled and a carcass from the new kitchen that I can put them in temporarily to make them usable.
My thinking is that there whilst not at all acceptable as a permanent solution, there should be no problem with me pulling the front of the existing FSU (40a cable and 32a MCB protection in place back to CU), and putting in a couple of cables on the load side with 16a commando sockets on them, and then 16a plugs on the ovens. I know the ovens will not exceed 16a and will be unlikely to even exceed 13a as I won't be using the grill element, I assume there is also a reasonable headway included in the 16a rating.
Or... Am I overthinking this and could make it even simpler by just plugging them into standard 13a sockets on two seperate RFC's using a 13a plug on each? If it doesn't blow the fuse... and I really doubt it would, is there an technical reason this would not be safe?
It goes without saying that whatever the temp solution, I'll be with the ovens the entire time they're used and would give them a test run ahead of the day.
Thoughts?