I will be having a Bosch Greenstar Boiler fitted and currently only have a 5core cable to the boiler position. My question is can i join N, Ns and Nz (pump neutral) together at the boiler to reduce the numbers of cores required ?
Yes I am with some, but as per Andrew, everything else is wiring center.Are you familiar with Bosch Boilers. It's a heat only boiler feeding a vented system on Y-Plan and 3-port valve doing C/H and HW.
Part P is a building regulation not a qualification.I am a Part P qualified electrician (using NAPIT).
I still don't see how you think joining the 3 neutral terminals together in the boiler is going to make even the tiniest bit of difference to anything? You've only got 5 cores so you're going to have to join them all together in the wiring centre anywayThank you Picasso. So if I common the neutrals in the boiler the power to the lives will still be cut when the boiler is switched off at the boiler controls in the way that Bosch require. ie communing the neutrals will not affect what Bosch are trying to achieve ? Thinking about it in that case the power to the lives will still be cut off just not in a double pole way (ie neutrals as well). Is that correct and OK ?
Have you asked Bosch? That might be a good place to start.Please look at my original question. I know that other boilers can be done with a five core. My question is can I join N, Ns and Np together in the boiler and just use one neutral away from the boiler. There must be a reason why Bosch Greenstar separate them ? I'd like to know what the reason is and can I override it by joining the three separate neutrals together. Along the way I've have seen something that suggests that Bosch want the feed to the wiring centre and pump to be "isolated" from backfeeds. I'd like expert confirmation that this can be circumvented by "commoning" the three separate neutral terminals. I don't want guesses or ill thought suggestions.
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