D
Dave
My garage has a small room attached with a sink. I'd like to fit a hand
wash unit above the sink, so I can get hot water. The one I have is
similar to this:
http://www.plumbnation.co.uk/site/heatrae-sadia-handy-3---7-hand-wash-units/
but is 7.2 kW.
I consider myself competent to fit the water heater (I have an
electrical engineering degree, I'm a member of the IEE and a chartered
engineer). However, I'm not sure of the IEE regulations on this, in
particular where a switch must be placed.
The house has a 3-phase supply, one of which goes to the garage. This is
fused at 80A in the house, and goes to an 8-way consumer unit in the
garage. Hence there is plenty of power in the garage for this.
I have fitted a 40 A RCBO, with a trip current of 30 mA. (The load
current is 32 A @ 230 V, so I thought a 40 A breaker was probably optimal).
Obviously I need to run a cable from the consumer unit to hand wash
unit. For this I have 6 mm^2 twin and earth.
But I have two questions:
1) Is it normal (or advisable) to put a switch close to the hand wash
unit, so it can be isolated without going to the consumer unit? Given
the heater will be on its own RCBO I could switch it off at the consumer
unit, without affecting anything else. It's only about 10 m away from
the consumer unit, but there is a door between the consumer unit and the
sink.
2) It if is usual to put a switch near the hand wash unit, where should
it be - height, distance from sink etc. Should it be so high up, that it
can't be reached from the floor without standing on something?
In some ways, I think it might be safer (and cheaper) to have no switch
near the handwash unit at all, but I suspect there should be one.
Can anyone tell me what the latest IEE regulations say on this?
--
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wash unit above the sink, so I can get hot water. The one I have is
similar to this:
http://www.plumbnation.co.uk/site/heatrae-sadia-handy-3---7-hand-wash-units/
but is 7.2 kW.
I consider myself competent to fit the water heater (I have an
electrical engineering degree, I'm a member of the IEE and a chartered
engineer). However, I'm not sure of the IEE regulations on this, in
particular where a switch must be placed.
The house has a 3-phase supply, one of which goes to the garage. This is
fused at 80A in the house, and goes to an 8-way consumer unit in the
garage. Hence there is plenty of power in the garage for this.
I have fitted a 40 A RCBO, with a trip current of 30 mA. (The load
current is 32 A @ 230 V, so I thought a 40 A breaker was probably optimal).
Obviously I need to run a cable from the consumer unit to hand wash
unit. For this I have 6 mm^2 twin and earth.
But I have two questions:
1) Is it normal (or advisable) to put a switch close to the hand wash
unit, so it can be isolated without going to the consumer unit? Given
the heater will be on its own RCBO I could switch it off at the consumer
unit, without affecting anything else. It's only about 10 m away from
the consumer unit, but there is a door between the consumer unit and the
sink.
2) It if is usual to put a switch near the hand wash unit, where should
it be - height, distance from sink etc. Should it be so high up, that it
can't be reached from the floor without standing on something?
In some ways, I think it might be safer (and cheaper) to have no switch
near the handwash unit at all, but I suspect there should be one.
Can anyone tell me what the latest IEE regulations say on this?
--
I respectfully request that this message is not archived by companies as
unscrupulous as 'Exchange Experts'. In case you are unaware,
'Exchange Experts' take questions posted on the web and try to find
idiots stupid enough to pay for the answers, which were posted freely
by others. They are leeches.