May 20, 2009
241
33
103
Minnions
If you're a qualified, trainee, or retired electrician - Which country is it that your work will be / is / was aimed at?
United Kingdom
What type of forum member are you?
Other
Hi all,
I did some work on a house the other day that had a circuit for sockets which was cabled in 4mm to half way in the house the split of it to 2.5 up to the sockets. It had a 32a breaker. I'm aware that you can have a 32a 4mm radial but that the whole circuit must be in 4mm. Using 2.5 on any part of the radial is not really acceptable am I right?
 
You can only have one double socket on a 2.5mm cable @32A it's no different to a spur, change the breaker to 20A if any more than one on 2.5mm radial
 
You can only have one double socket on a 2.5mm cable @32A it's no different to a spur, change the breaker to 20A if any more than one on 2.5mm radial

2.5mm radial on 32amp breaker you sure?.
 
if the 2.5 is feeding one double outlet...then yep...its OK..
Well how over 3 decades things have changed, still you won't get me doing It.!!lol (that don't sit well with me)
 
  • Like
Reactions: 2 people
Its amazing how many people don't know that 2.5mm cant carry 32a unless it is one spur
 
3 decades ago you was allowed to spur two twin socket outlets on a 2.5mm unless my memory has failed me.
 
spur from a ring final cct
 
2.5mm radial on 32amp breaker you sure?.
As far as I know you can't buy a bigger fuse than 13a for a plug top x 2 = 26A perfectly controlled cable rating, so many sparks afraid of the limits, if you're under you're under
 
are you sure this wasn`t a hybrid circuit here...?

it was a radial circuit cabled with 4mm for about 5/6 metres which I could see under the floor of the bungalow. It was then branched off with 2.5 to the sockets above. All on a 32a mcb.
 
As far as I know you can't buy a bigger fuse than 13a for a plug top x 2 = 26A perfectly controlled cable rating, so many sparks afraid of the limits, if you're under you're under

Never liked the idea of relying on forward fusing, like to design a circuit fit for purpose, with your principle you might as well back it with a 45amp breaker.!!
 
it was a radial circuit cabled with 4mm for about 5/6 metres which I could see under the floor of the bungalow. It was then branched off with 2.5 to the sockets above. All on a 32a mcb.
well its the I N of the MCB that fails here...not the circuit...(assuming it tests OK that is).....
 
are you sure this wasn`t a hybrid circuit here...?

I suppose it was kind of hybrid. It was a bungalow with one socket circuit which included all sockets and the kitchen... So the circuit does have a fair amount of 2.5 in it but also has quite a lot of 4mm as well. It's not burnt down so far, I told the customer they didn't seem that bothered.
 
You sure the 2.5’s are spurs? Sounds like a lollipop to me.

It might have been. I only had to work on one socket which had only one piece of 2.5 going to it from the piece of 4mm from the board. I since changed that one to 4mm I could see under the floor another junction box with another spur in 2.5 going up. Just never seen this before. Wasn't able to check any of the other sockets.
 
From that description it may possibly be a lollipop radial, i.e. each socket is a single radial out from the 4mm, but I think you would have seen that.
 
Lollipop_zps118a7755.jpg

Quite handy for largish buildings. Run a 4/6mm from the CU to where the ring is needed. Great for confusing the youngsters.

I think we used 6mm when we got around to rewiring the brothers 4 floor + basement house. Both of us electricians, it only took three years to finish.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 person
Lollipop_zps118a7755.jpg

Quite handy for largish buildings. Run a 4/6mm from the CU to where the ring is needed. Great for confusing the youngsters.

I think we used 6mm when we got around to rewiring the brothers 4 floor + basement house. Both of us electricians, it only took three years to finish.

We used to do this in labs for bench sockets when I was an apprentice. 6mm to a 30A switch above the bench, from there a ring of sockets for the bench.
 
Lollipop_zps118a7755.jpg

Quite handy for largish buildings. Run a 4/6mm from the CU to where the ring is needed. Great for confusing the youngsters.

I think we used 6mm when we got around to rewiring the brothers 4 floor + basement house. Both of us electricians, it only took three years to finish.
LOL, like a cobblers children always go worst shod (or the phrase is something like that)!
 
Im sure there is a regulation about downsizing requiring a protective device even if the upstream protects the smaller conductor.
 
No, the regulation requires protection at every reduction in ccc, the conversion to a ring from a radial does not represent a reduction in ccc, just the csa of the cable.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 2 people

Similar threads

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Electrician Courses Green Electrical Goods PCB Way Electric Underfloor Heating Electrician Courses Heating 2 Go Electrician Workwear Supplier
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

Advert

YOUR Unread Posts

Daily, weekly or monthly email

Thread starter

Joined
Location
Minnions
If you're a qualified, trainee, or retired electrician - Which country is it that your work will be / is / was aimed at?
United Kingdom
What type of forum member are you?
Other

Thread Information

Title
4mm half of circuit on 32a mcb
Prefix
N/A
Forum
UK Electrical Forum
Start date
Last reply date
Replies
27

Advert

Thread statistics

Created
rustynails,
Last reply from
Knobhead,
Replies
27
Views
3,121

Advert