At the moment we have an all-in-one cooker with max. wattage rated at 10085 W. (44 amps at 230V). The cooker switch "box" has a separate plug-socket on it but I rarely use that socket. The cooker itself is fed from its switch-box by about 1m. of what appears to be 6mm2 T&E (externally about 15mm broad) into a 30A junction box from which another 1m of what appears to be 4mm (about 12mm broad) goes to the cooker.
The whole thing is on a separate 32A mcb-protected radial circuit from a Legrand main-box that was professionally installed 9 years ago. We have never had a moments trouble with this installation or the electrics in general.
The kitchen is being revamped. I have bought for a very low price (from a good friend) a double-oven (Neff 1422) which is fairly new..2-3 years...hardly used. It is rated at 4.6kw and has a tail of what looks like 4mm2 T&E which has just been cut 10" from the oven back when it was removed from its original setting (not by me).
The hob we want to buy is rated at 6400W. so overall the max. loading is 915 W. more than before...i.e. 11000W (48A @230v)
Given the existing cooker installation has never caused us a problem and we're only adding less than a KW) would it be ok in principle to create a "star" on the end of the circuit..taking 2 lengths of 4mm2 from the existing 32A junction box..one to feed the new oven the other to feed the adjacent hob? The existing cooker switch-box would probably be replaced with one without an ancillary socket. There would be very few, if any, occasions where max.load would be approached as there are only two of us in the house..on the existing cooker we rarely use both ovens at once for example.
The alternative would be to run a new (separate for the oven alone) radial circuit from the main-box 10 m away (across the loft-space and down into the kitchen..its a bungalow). I do have one spare 32A mcb at the moment.
Guess this is PartP work and really I should get an electrician in? Well I would anyway tbh if I went for the separate radial circuit..I don't want to be messing with the main-box.
Thanks for reading what I know is a long post but I wanted to try and include all relevant details at the outset (I expect I've still left something vital out!). Any comments gratefully received.
The whole thing is on a separate 32A mcb-protected radial circuit from a Legrand main-box that was professionally installed 9 years ago. We have never had a moments trouble with this installation or the electrics in general.
The kitchen is being revamped. I have bought for a very low price (from a good friend) a double-oven (Neff 1422) which is fairly new..2-3 years...hardly used. It is rated at 4.6kw and has a tail of what looks like 4mm2 T&E which has just been cut 10" from the oven back when it was removed from its original setting (not by me).
The hob we want to buy is rated at 6400W. so overall the max. loading is 915 W. more than before...i.e. 11000W (48A @230v)
Given the existing cooker installation has never caused us a problem and we're only adding less than a KW) would it be ok in principle to create a "star" on the end of the circuit..taking 2 lengths of 4mm2 from the existing 32A junction box..one to feed the new oven the other to feed the adjacent hob? The existing cooker switch-box would probably be replaced with one without an ancillary socket. There would be very few, if any, occasions where max.load would be approached as there are only two of us in the house..on the existing cooker we rarely use both ovens at once for example.
The alternative would be to run a new (separate for the oven alone) radial circuit from the main-box 10 m away (across the loft-space and down into the kitchen..its a bungalow). I do have one spare 32A mcb at the moment.
Guess this is PartP work and really I should get an electrician in? Well I would anyway tbh if I went for the separate radial circuit..I don't want to be messing with the main-box.
Thanks for reading what I know is a long post but I wanted to try and include all relevant details at the outset (I expect I've still left something vital out!). Any comments gratefully received.

