- Jun 27, 2020
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- If you're a qualified, trainee, or retired electrician - Which country is it that your work will be / is / was aimed at?
- Ireland
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- Able Electrical
Vortigern. I also think it would be wrong to dispose of the ring (though it looks to me inevitable). As you know I am not a fan, but it has its place and there is clearly a particular affinity among British sparks for it which in my view should certainly be respected.To be honest I was being a bit provocative/sarcastic. I fully agree there is a place for each of the types of circuit. And the radial is essential in a number of cases. What I rail against is the disposal of the ring final circuit in favour of the radial taking over and dispensing with rfc altogether. I don't think people have thought this through actually. So we have a radial as the preferred household circuit. Branching and branches off of the branches, a kind of fractal growth of additions over the years. Now, it is you job to track down a fault. What would you prefer a nightmare of endless branches or a nice orderly ring with a crossover?
Could I however comment on your point about radials. I have noticed this concept of radials been presented in several posts as "tree, s" with apparently ever extending "branches" resulting in "faultfinding been a nightmare". But where does this happen? This view does not conform with the situation on the ground in my experience. The radials in use here in socket circuits are very simple "loop in., loop out". No tree, s, no branches and faultfinding is a doddle.
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By "badly modified radial circuit" could you give some more examples of exactly what you mean?I can see why they are allowed, as they don't impact on the safety of a ring when done correctly.
But my bone of contention is the same as a badly modified radial circuit - you have far, far, more things that can be done badly where more than one 13A socket has been spurred off, etc. Also it degrades the elegant testability of a ring (the figure-of-8 style) as a higher R at some point might be bad connections/socket, or it could just be a run of cable on a spur.
So to me an installation with spurs is fundamentally a bad starting point (really you could not run the ring to/from that point, or maybe just a radial for that odd load?) and once folk start modifying it you get in to the test/verification nightmare.
But that is not an attribute of ring per se as if you do dumb stuff to a radial (i.e. creating a the Christmas tree circuit) you get exactly the same issues of being able to adequately confirm it is all safe.