Should we be encouraging poor design which goes against the recommendations of the IET on this site?
We keep on encouraging ones which do not go against them.Should we be encouraging poor design which goes against the recommendations of the IET on this site?
That's a pretty loaded question, to which the short answer (at least to the first part - "should we encourage poor design?") clearly has to be 'no'.Should we be encouraging poor design which goes against the recommendations of the IET on this site?
I'm pretty neutral on this issue, but if you have 4mm² 32A radials instead of 2.5mm² 32A rings, there is no reason for any more MCB tripping, there is no need for larger CUs and the difference in terms of amount of copper is likely to be insignificant (might even be less with some circuit topologies, since 4mm² < 2 x 2.5mm²).If new houses used radials, I wonder how many complaints there would be of "my MCB's tripped. This house is faulty/poorly designed" there would be ? ... this added to the extra cost of larger CU's (and lack of room for them) ... and thicker copper cable required = £
The fashion today is to waste as much copper as possible.
As I sort-of implied, that will often be the case. A potential problem arises when the CU is in a kitchen or utility room, with sockets for dryers, WMs etc., very close. If, due to installation method etc., the CCC of the cable is at the lower limit of what is allowed (20A), then the potential problem gets much larger, since that 10% increases to something like 37% - i.e. avoidance of cable overload is not guaranteed unless the loads are within about ±13% of the mid-point of the ring.In general there are probably no sockets within the first 10% of a ring bearing in mind rings usually start under the stairs.
I would say that it is a well-intentioned recommendation but, as I've said, it is just one of a list of recommendations/suggestions as to ways in which long-term overloading of any of the cable can be avoided, and there is no reason why a designer who knows what they are doing should not use other (maybe even 'better') methods of achieving that requirement.Manufacturers of appliances don't seem to recognise this recommendation, and there appear to be no known cases of problems. Perhaps some jobsworth in the IET dreamt this up and somehow it has become a recommendation.
That is likely to be the case if the circuit is supplying sockets fairly close to the CU. However, if most/all the sockets are more remote from the CU (e.g. 'upstairs sockets circuits'), that is much less likely to be the case.A 4mm radial when compared to a correctly designed ring, will use more copper, as the return leg will be fairly short when designed correctly.
I'm sure that is often the case. I used to be 'nervous' about wiring accessories with 4mm² cable, but it really is not much of an issue, and I certainly don't any longer regard it as a problem (and I'm not even an electrician)..I guess people don't like terminating and and installing 4mm at every socket unless they have to.
It obviously depends upon the arrangement of house and positioning of upstairs sockets but there is the potential for a fairly long return run to the CU when one has a ring. If you want a more dramatic example, think of a second floor (or higher!) sockets circuit fed from a ground floor CU.I still don't see it as an issue on an upstairs socket circuit.
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