I'm planning a ring of sockets for a garage. I'd like to do this by taking steel conduit down from the plasterboarded ceiling and installing metal clad double sockets, probably about four of them, two either side of the garage. Above the plasterboard I can use T&E, inside the conduit it seems normal to use flexible, individual wires. I don't want to put conduit all the way round the garage to make a 'ring' since I want to put shelves and other units in between the sockets without interfering with the conduit.
So my question is really, how would you wire this? I start with T&E in the ceiling, then I could go: Bonding nipple, straight coupler then screwed nipple, taking T&E into tee box where I transition to the flexible with a choc block, then down the conduit to the socket with the flexible, then back up to the tee box again, another choc block, back to T&E out the other tee exit, screwed nipple, straight coupler, another bonding nipple taking me back to T&E, through a few joists and on to the next drop. The tee boxes would be above the plasterboard.
A simpler solution would be just push the T&E down the conduit. Since it's a single straight length it'll probably go OK, then I tee it into a normal junction box screwed to one of the ceiling joists. I just wonder if I'm committing some faux pas by putting T&E in a round steel conduit, or did I miss a better way of doing this?
The other thing is that I don't see any obvious way of earthing those 20mm conduit boxes. They have an M4 threaded hole in the back only. None of the electrical wholesalers seem to sell any kind of earthing clamp for M4 screws (or is the screw supposed to become the clamp?), so I decided it was best to earth the boxes with a 4mm dia uninsulated eyelet crimp. I'm curious what the professionals do in this regard - one wholesaler said most electricians don't earth the conduit (hence they didn't stock anything for this), which just sounds wrong.
thanks,
S.
So my question is really, how would you wire this? I start with T&E in the ceiling, then I could go: Bonding nipple, straight coupler then screwed nipple, taking T&E into tee box where I transition to the flexible with a choc block, then down the conduit to the socket with the flexible, then back up to the tee box again, another choc block, back to T&E out the other tee exit, screwed nipple, straight coupler, another bonding nipple taking me back to T&E, through a few joists and on to the next drop. The tee boxes would be above the plasterboard.
A simpler solution would be just push the T&E down the conduit. Since it's a single straight length it'll probably go OK, then I tee it into a normal junction box screwed to one of the ceiling joists. I just wonder if I'm committing some faux pas by putting T&E in a round steel conduit, or did I miss a better way of doing this?
The other thing is that I don't see any obvious way of earthing those 20mm conduit boxes. They have an M4 threaded hole in the back only. None of the electrical wholesalers seem to sell any kind of earthing clamp for M4 screws (or is the screw supposed to become the clamp?), so I decided it was best to earth the boxes with a 4mm dia uninsulated eyelet crimp. I'm curious what the professionals do in this regard - one wholesaler said most electricians don't earth the conduit (hence they didn't stock anything for this), which just sounds wrong.
thanks,
S.