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GBDamo

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I have a TPN board that will feed 8-10 sub boards. The loads on each board are negligible 5-10 amps peak but mostly 1-2 amps.

The distribution circuits will be fed in 6mm mostly for VD reasons but also to allow some selectivity on the OCPD(MCB) my dilemma is SWA or T&E.

The route is 98% tray before entering a room and feeding a surface mounted consumer unit.

For aesthetic reasons they want the cables in the wall, fair enough, but I'm in a catch 22.

If SWA I'd never be able to gland into the back of the CUs and the SWA would end up surface, if T&E the cable would be in a timber partition but less that 50mm deep thus requiring RCD which completely negates the principle of sub devision of circuits.

1, Am I going OTT worrying about this c0.5m drop from the ceiling to the back of the CU?

2, My "Solution" is to mount a galvanised box above the ceiling, gland the T&E through into some earthed steel flexicon, down inside the wall and into the back of the CU.

3, Am I missing a more obvious simpler solution?

Thanks.
 
I have seen people gland into a through box during 1st fix ( which is often left floating and just pull the single cores through the plaster board wall
 
The "last few cm" of a distribution circuit supply requiring RCD protection is one of the irritations of the regs.
I've long thought that anyone who decides to go drilling in the 20cm above a CU deserves to become an integral part of a new circuit.
Bring back the 16th edition!
 
The "last few cm" of a distribution circuit supply requiring RCD protection is one of the irritations of the regs.
I've long thought that anyone who decides to go drilling in the 20cm above a CU deserves to become an integral part of a new circuit.
Bring back the 16th edition!

If its just the last drop down/up to the CU then it's easy enough to give it mechanical protection. A bit of galv conduit or even a metal plate is all you need.
 
I go out flying kites with the grandkids far more often than I drill holes in the walls of my house.
their is some loose advice out there if you search for it that recommends not to fly kites near overhead power lines. (The sparks amongst us will already know itโ€™s a bad idea)

there are regulations that prohibit running cables an inch below the surface from a consumer unit to the ceiling (230v) where no sane person would drill a hole but a bit of advice not to mess with the 11,000v overhead lines.
over the top maybe?
 
I go out flying kites with the grandkids far more often than I drill holes in the walls of my house.
their is some loose advice out there if you search for it that recommends not to fly kites near overhead power lines. (The sparks amongst us will already know itโ€™s a bad idea)

there are regulations that prohibit running cables an inch below the surface from a consumer unit to the ceiling (230v) where no sane person would drill a hole but a bit of advice not to mess with the 11,000v overhead lines.
over the top maybe?

I'd rather over the top regulations than one single person's death, one single child growing up without a parent, one family left destitute as the bread-winner is dead.
 
If its just the last drop down/up to the CU then it's easy enough to give it mechanical protection. A bit of galv conduit or even a metal plate is all you need.
I was thinking of situations where thereโ€™s enough room to fish down without disturbing decoration but not enough room to mechanically protect it. E.g in a commercial from above suspended ceiling down behind the plasterboard. Iโ€™m happy to learn any tricks if there are any.
But I agree that if redecoration is going to happen itโ€™s simple enough.
(Btw I donโ€™t really want anyone to die of course, I was just venting that there is a trend of over regulating and common sense eroding away. We stop short of the requirements of USA wiring regs at least)
 
I'd rather over the top regulations than one single person's death, one single child growing up without a parent, one family left destitute as the bread-winner is dead.
It's that thinking that has stiffed the west, the "one death is too many".

Progress requires risk, if you take zero risk you get zero progress. But, and its a huge but, there is a ballance.

I'd further berate the zero risk advocates on account of their hypocrisy, it's not zero risk they want it's zero visible risk, they're happy to profit from heavy industry in India and China, they can't see those deaths.

No one is advocating sending kids down a mine, we'll unless they're brown kids in an African mine, but that's acceptable because, well, I'd have to change my iPhone less frequently.

I've always found it odd the places we don't apply the "One death is too many" rule. Why do we allow leisure use of the roads? How many cyclists die every year whilst playing on the roads?

Swimming in the sea, lakes and rivers; ban them.

Motorcycles; ban them.

Smoking, drinking, sex; ban them all.

You'd be bored to tears but you'd be safe.
 

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