Discuss How do fused spurs FCUs work. in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

Reaction score
1
Hi, quick question. How do FCU's work? Do they just protect the load side and what I mean is, say you have a ring final with 2.5mm^2 protected by a 20a mcb at the consumer unit and you add a fused spur on that ring de-rated to 3a to supply a 1mm cable for lighting. Now say you start turning on kettles, toasters, microwaves on that ring that pull more than 3a, is that 3a in the fused unit going to pop? Or will it only pop if the load side on the FCU pulls more than 3a?

Just an electrical enthusiast who was watching a video on it and wondered how it actually works.


cheers
 
Hi, quick question. How do FCU's work? Do they just protect the load side and what I mean is, say you have a ring final with 2.5mm^2 protected by a 20a mcb at the consumer unit and you add a fused spur on that ring de-rated to 3a to supply a 1mm cable for lighting. Now say you start turning on kettles, toasters, microwaves on that ring that pull more than 3a, is that 3a in the fused unit going to pop? Or will it only pop if the load side on the FCU pulls more than 3a?

Just an electrical enthusiast who was watching a video on it and wondered how it actually works.


cheers
Hi Mavezy, firstly a Final Ring Circuit should be protected by a 32A overload protective device, a BS 60898 Mcb, A BS1361 Fuse at the DB/Consumer Unit or a BS 1363 at the FCU. All of these forms of protection are installed for protection against overload and earth live short circuit. Usually nowadays we have additional circuit protection by RCDs, or Residual Current Detectors, for their proper name. These devices detect unusually high currents in connected devices, but not overload or short circuit faults. Basically if an FCU is pulling 35 amps,the 3A fuse will not trip, but the RCD at the Consumer unit will.
 
Hi Mavezy, firstly a Final Ring Circuit should be protected by a 32A overload protective device, a BS 60898 Mcb, A BS1361 Fuse at the DB/Consumer Unit or a BS 1363 at the FCU. All of these forms of protection are installed for protection against overload and earth live short circuit. Usually nowadays we have additional circuit protection by RCDs, or Residual Current Detectors, for their proper name. These devices detect unusually high currents in connected devices, but not overload or short circuit faults. Basically if an FCU is pulling 35 amps,the 3A fuse will not trip, but the RCD at the Consumer unit will.

Have to disagree with you here.

RCD or Residual Current Device measures current in line and neutral, tripping when imbalance between these approaches a set threshold.

An RCD does not incorporate any means of overload protection and will not trip as you describe.
 
Hi Mavezy, firstly a Final Ring Circuit should be protected by a 32A overload protective device, a BS 60898 Mcb, A BS1361 Fuse at the DB/Consumer Unit or a BS 1363 at the FCU. All of these forms of protection are installed for protection against overload and earth live short circuit. Usually nowadays we have additional circuit protection by

RCDs, or Residual Current Detectors, for their proper name.
And there is me thinking RCD stood for residual current device.

These devices detect unusually high currents in connected devices, but not overload or short circuit faults.
That statement doesn't make sense

Basically if an FCU is pulling 35 amps,the 3A fuse will not trip, but the RCD at the Consumer unit will.
Neither does this one.
 
an rcd will not detect unusually high current providing it is equal in the live and N it will not trip.
a 3A fuse will not survive 35A for long, trust me it will blow but I don’t have the time/current chart to hand so I can’t say how long it will survive but it will be measured in seconds, not minutes.
edit, just looked it up, less than 0.1 seconds
 
Last edited:
You can think of a FCU has a "hard-wired 13A plug" in a way. The load has the same type of fuse to protect the cable and load (selected to match, usually 3A for lights, etc, and 13A for a big load), but the supply side is basically the same as any other 13A socket has (typically 32A).
 
a 3A fuse will not survive 35A for long, trust me it will blow but I don’t have the time/current chart to hand
It is under 20ms

BS1362FusingTime.png
 
Hi Mavezy, firstly a Final Ring Circuit should be protected by a 32A overload protective device, a BS 60898 Mcb, A BS1361 Fuse at the DB/Consumer Unit or a BS 1363 at the FCU. All of these forms of protection are installed for protection against overload and earth live short circuit. Usually nowadays we have additional circuit protection by RCDs, or Residual Current Detectors, for their proper name. These devices detect unusually high currents in connected devices, but not overload or short circuit faults. Basically if an FCU is pulling 35 amps,the 3A fuse will not trip, but the RCD at the Consumer unit will.

as a first post to the forum, it was a shame that even though you list yourself as highly qualified lecturer of the subject,
it was riddled with technical errors, why not try posting in the welcome forum nd having a chat about what sort of things you have been involved with?
we are a friendly group and not a bunch of trolls here
however if you post something that is wrong on A Technical point, it will be noticed and pointed out.
 

Reply to How do fused spurs FCUs work. in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

Similar Threads

Hi guys, newbie posting! Does the following sound ok... Existing circuit: SOCKET on a ring -> spur to SWITCHED 3A FCU -> SWITCH -> hardwired FAN...
Replies
11
Views
670
Hi there I have a few questions related to the power ratings of certain devices and how this interplays with the fuse. The reason I am asking...
Replies
4
Views
969
Hi, can someone give me some advice RE completing a small works certificate for a fused spur coming from a ring final. 1) In part 2 of the AMD2...
Replies
35
Views
7K
Hi Guys, Long time member and not a regular user here. I do pop in here when the odd unknown pop's up and unable to locate an electrical dilemma...
Replies
4
Views
861
Hello all. I have just bought my first house but it needs a bit of work. I am re-wiring it and I've found the conservatory ring has been spurred...
Replies
11
Views
2K

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

Electrical Forum

Welcome to the Electrical Forum at ElectriciansForums.net. The friendliest electrical forum online. General electrical questions and answers can be found in the electrical forum.
This website was designed, optimised and is hosted by Untold Media. Operating under the name Untold Media since 2001.
Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock