I have been reading all day to try and figure out what reference method should be used for the following as it doesn't seem to be quite covered in any of the reference methods or on any tables:
I've got an outbuilding with OSB stud walls, the outer OSB sheet has membrane then cladding facing outside the building and the inner OSB sheet has plasterboard and plaster facing inside the room. Between the 2 OSB sheets is a 100mm cavity, attached to the OSB sheet that forms the outer wall is a Rockwool/glass fibre on a roll type of material, this is stapled to the OSB inside the cavity, the OSB board it is stapled to forms the outside wall. 2.5mm T&E comes down from the top of these walls in front of the insulation, it will be touching the OSB wall that faces the inside of the building or have an air gap. The 2.5mm T&E is clipped on at the top of the wall along the upper studs then drop down to where each socket will go, the cable is not clipped inside the wall as these wall panels are prefabricated.
Where I am struggling to work this out is due to a few factors, firstly the regs mention "touching" the inner wall and not "clipped", the 2.5mm T&E is between the inner wall OSB sheet and the rockwool, I cannot say for certain it's touching the inner wall all everywhere it's certainly resting on the wall in places. Some of it might be in free air on one or more sides. I can say for sure that none of it is passing through the insulation.
I'm trying to work out if this would fall under Reference Method 102 or the A - G tables? Reference Method 103 really seems to get the impression looking at illustrations that's for scenarios where a cable would pass through insulation or be surrounded by it on all sides.
This does not seem too dissimilar to Reference Method 100 (But vertical) and speaking from my own experience I've never really seen T&E touching all of the plasterboard when laid on top of ceiling.
There seems to be some ambiguity with Methods 102 - 103 and it leaves a lot to interpretation, then there are the Thermal U values and types of insulation etc.
Any advice would be gratefully appreciated.
I've got an outbuilding with OSB stud walls, the outer OSB sheet has membrane then cladding facing outside the building and the inner OSB sheet has plasterboard and plaster facing inside the room. Between the 2 OSB sheets is a 100mm cavity, attached to the OSB sheet that forms the outer wall is a Rockwool/glass fibre on a roll type of material, this is stapled to the OSB inside the cavity, the OSB board it is stapled to forms the outside wall. 2.5mm T&E comes down from the top of these walls in front of the insulation, it will be touching the OSB wall that faces the inside of the building or have an air gap. The 2.5mm T&E is clipped on at the top of the wall along the upper studs then drop down to where each socket will go, the cable is not clipped inside the wall as these wall panels are prefabricated.
Where I am struggling to work this out is due to a few factors, firstly the regs mention "touching" the inner wall and not "clipped", the 2.5mm T&E is between the inner wall OSB sheet and the rockwool, I cannot say for certain it's touching the inner wall all everywhere it's certainly resting on the wall in places. Some of it might be in free air on one or more sides. I can say for sure that none of it is passing through the insulation.
I'm trying to work out if this would fall under Reference Method 102 or the A - G tables? Reference Method 103 really seems to get the impression looking at illustrations that's for scenarios where a cable would pass through insulation or be surrounded by it on all sides.
This does not seem too dissimilar to Reference Method 100 (But vertical) and speaking from my own experience I've never really seen T&E touching all of the plasterboard when laid on top of ceiling.
There seems to be some ambiguity with Methods 102 - 103 and it leaves a lot to interpretation, then there are the Thermal U values and types of insulation etc.
Any advice would be gratefully appreciated.

