Discuss To spur or not to spur?..... in the Electrical Wiring, Theories and Regulations area at ElectriciansForums.net

There used to be [and still is I think] a picture in the OSG showing sockets via a FCU beig fed in 1.5mm. I wonder if anyone's ever done that ? In theory fine but I like 2.5 or sometimes 4mm in socket terminals.
 
Fair enough, I do like a bit of 1.5 but normally stick to using it for larger lighting loads or a radial to a small NSH for example. Good for boiler supplies too.
 
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So the majority think it should be both spurs off the load side of an SFCU? That was my initial thought.
The back box is 32mm, but below the surface of the plaster so maybe close to 40. Should be ok for 4 cables.
Sorry if I confused anyone with the set up. I'll draw a diagram next time
 
There used to be [and still is I think] a picture in the OSG showing sockets via a FCU beig fed in 1.5mm. I wonder if anyone's ever done that ? In theory fine but I like 2.5 or sometimes 4mm in socket terminals.

1.5mm T&E from load side of a 13A FCU to a 13A socket sounds OK to me.
 
Here's a thought experiment:

Imagine there was another blank 1G box on the RFC, maybe 3 feet away from your first one. You'd presumably not have a problem having one unfused socket spur from each of these?

Now reduce the distance... a foot apart, still happy?

2x 1G back boxes adjacent to each other (with a part of the ring between them)... Still happy?

How short does the distance between spur points have to be before you become uncomfortable? An inch? You could fit both in the same back box.

What about a length of zero? Two spurs, off the same point on the RFC, using 32A (or higher) 4-hole connectors?

Just a thought experiment :)
 
Um... I've done the job now. I put the existing spur on the feed side of the SFCU, and the new spur, in 1.5 to a double socket from the load side. Right or wrong, its done now and I cant see the difference from this, or a spur off the back of a single socket and running an extension lead from it.
 

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