I'm planning to get two single ovens and have been trying to find the best way to do the circuits. People seem to do it every way possible but I have doubts about some of the ways that they are done. The ovens I'm looking at are 16A appliances (max power is approx 14A), so I won't be plugging them into a socket.
My feeling is that two 16A radials would be best. Also, if one of the breakers trip then the other oven can still be used. The circuit(s) will be new so running two cables won't cost much more than one cable.
However, I hear about using a 32A breaker with a dual cooker connection unit and have seen this in people's homes. This seems to be the standard way of doing this but I can't understand how it's safe. There could be something simple that I'm missing though. The ovens (Bosch/NEF/Siemens) come with their own cable cable, and surely this cable would only be rated at 16A? If these cables have a 16A capacity and they go on a 32A breaker then surely that means that they aren't adequately protected? Is this really a safe (and regs compliant) way of doing it?
I think I know what is best but it really bugs me when I don't understand things. Equally, if my ovens were wired with a 32A breaker then I would worry about them unless somebody can explain how the cable won't go if there is a fault.
My feeling is that two 16A radials would be best. Also, if one of the breakers trip then the other oven can still be used. The circuit(s) will be new so running two cables won't cost much more than one cable.
However, I hear about using a 32A breaker with a dual cooker connection unit and have seen this in people's homes. This seems to be the standard way of doing this but I can't understand how it's safe. There could be something simple that I'm missing though. The ovens (Bosch/NEF/Siemens) come with their own cable cable, and surely this cable would only be rated at 16A? If these cables have a 16A capacity and they go on a 32A breaker then surely that means that they aren't adequately protected? Is this really a safe (and regs compliant) way of doing it?
I think I know what is best but it really bugs me when I don't understand things. Equally, if my ovens were wired with a 32A breaker then I would worry about them unless somebody can explain how the cable won't go if there is a fault.