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Immersion heater wiring

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David Hearn

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Apr 30, 2010, 9:46:54 AM4/30/10
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Our old hot water cylinder (inherited with the house) came with an
immersion heater wired via a 13amp plug. This hasn't been used by us for
years (since the thermostat blew, boiling the water and shooting it into
the loft!). It's been unplugged ever since.

I'm planning on replacing the hot water cylinder, and therefore need to
decide whether to fit an immersion heater or not. I'm thinking to fit
one, but not actually wire it in yet (or ever!). I have no intention of
ever wiring it into a plug! I know that's totally wrong...

Anyway, if I remember correctly (I haven't looked at it for a couple of
years), the socket which the immersion heater used to plug into was on
the one of the lighting circuits, which is wired into a 16A MCB (plug in
type for old fuse box). The other light circuit has, I think, a 6A MCB.

Is it permitted (I doubt it's recommended) to replace the existing
socket with a suitable double isolator immersion switch and wire the
immersion in that way? It's the only source of power in that cupboard,
and would be the easiest way of getting power to the immersion heater.

I just want to think about things for the future, rather than actually
going ahead and doing anything about wiring it in now.

Thanks

David

spamlet

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Apr 30, 2010, 11:07:17 AM4/30/10
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"David Hearn" <da...@NOswampieSPAM.org.uk> wrote in message
news:8405af...@mid.individual.net...

Presumably you mean the water is normally heated by gas. In which case you
will be very grateful for keeping an immersion option open should there be
any problems with the gas supply (eg roadworks) at a later date. Don't see
why you would need any special arrangement, other than a big enough 'fuse':
you no doubt have similar devices in your kettle and washing machine, and
having them on plugs makes them easier to replace when they blow.
Thermostats do get stuck occasionally, and the fact that your system was
able to relieve the pressure into the loft, is a good sign, though you would
normally arrange things so that the overflow would go back into the cold
water tank, or outside, rather than doing any harm.

S


David Hearn

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Apr 30, 2010, 11:13:06 AM4/30/10
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Yes, normally heated by gas.

The vent pipe was vaguely aimed into the (open topped) cold water tank,
however, due to the spluttering nature of it boiling, and it's vague
aim, and a bit of insulation lying between the tank/vent probably most
ended up going through the ceiling and running down a light fitting onto
a bed... all whilst we were out the house.

D

ARWadsworth

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Apr 30, 2010, 11:14:59 AM4/30/10
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"David Hearn" <da...@NOswampieSPAM.org.uk> wrote in message
news:8405af...@mid.individual.net...
> Our old hot water cylinder (inherited with the house) came with an
> immersion heater wired via a 13amp plug. This hasn't been used by us for
> years (since the thermostat blew, boiling the water and shooting it into
> the loft!). It's been unplugged ever since.
>
> I'm planning on replacing the hot water cylinder, and therefore need to
> decide whether to fit an immersion heater or not. I'm thinking to fit
> one, but not actually wire it in yet (or ever!). I have no intention of
> ever wiring it into a plug! I know that's totally wrong...
>
> Anyway, if I remember correctly (I haven't looked at it for a couple of
> years), the socket which the immersion heater used to plug into was on the
> one of the lighting circuits, which is wired into a 16A MCB (plug in type
> for old fuse box). The other light circuit has, I think, a 6A MCB.

I would start by checking that out. 16A is not a typical rating for a
lighting circuit.

Adam


David Hearn

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Apr 30, 2010, 11:16:37 AM4/30/10
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Might it be for a light + immersion heater circuit though. ;)

D

spamlet

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Apr 30, 2010, 11:58:47 AM4/30/10
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"David Hearn" <da...@NOswampieSPAM.org.uk> wrote in message
news:840ac2...@mid.individual.net...

You wouldn't normally want to run the immersion element while you were out:
I've always considered these to be just 'emergency' boosters, and rather
expensive to just leave on. All the same, the next one you get, make sure
it has a thermostat that turns off at a reasonable temp. This one
(http://www.tradingdepot.co.uk/DEF/product/!!IMHEURALLOY30!!/) says it has
an "overtemperature cut out mechanism" so that it can be reset rather than
replacing, every time the thermostat plays up (Which, given my experience
with kettles, I still wouldn't rely on 100% but may be better than the one
you have.) Loosen the old one while the hw tank is full, and you are less
likely to distort it or the pipes that run in and out of it: then empty the
tank to unscrew it completely and put the new one in.

Make a cover for the water tank and make sure the vent pipe goes through
it - but not under the water or below any level it is likely to rise to. If
it has been some time without a lid, you may want to empty it and clean out
all the dead birds and rats etc. (tie up the ball valve with a bungee cord
up onto a roof beam, I often find is a handy way of stopping it filling
without having to hunt for the stopcock: while you open the cold tap on the
bath to empty it.).

If you really don't want to use a plug, and you still want the option of
using the heater while you are out, and don't want to trust it, you could
use one of these:

http://www.maplin.co.uk/Module.aspx?ModuleNo=12726

S

Dave Plowman (News)

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Apr 30, 2010, 12:44:35 PM4/30/10
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In article <8405af...@mid.individual.net>,

David Hearn <da...@NOswampieSPAM.org.uk> wrote:
> Our old hot water cylinder (inherited with the house) came with an
> immersion heater wired via a 13amp plug. This hasn't been used by us for
> years (since the thermostat blew, boiling the water and shooting it into
> the loft!). It's been unplugged ever since.

Modern ones have two thermostats to prevent this. The standard single ones
did have a habit of jamming and boiling. However, a properly installed
header tank should be able to cope with this fault without overflowing.

--
*Learn from your parents' mistakes - use birth control.

Dave Plowman da...@davenoise.co.uk London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.

John

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Apr 30, 2010, 1:01:50 PM4/30/10
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"Dave Plowman (News)" <da...@davenoise.co.uk> wrote in message
news:511028e...@davenoise.co.uk...

I seem to think it is now mandatory to have an overtemp trip thermostat on a
new installation.


NT

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Apr 30, 2010, 1:12:40 PM4/30/10
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16A lighting circuits arent compliant, and I cant help but wonder if a
5A circuit has had its fuse/mcb changed.

If your supply isnt up to running 3kW, I hear you can get dual element
heaters that go in one standard hole fitting. If thats correct, just
wire the 2 elements in series and you've effectively got a half power
heater there, which can be run on a 10A lighting circuit or a 13A
plug.


NT

ARWadsworth

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Apr 30, 2010, 2:13:26 PM4/30/10
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"David Hearn" <da...@NOswampieSPAM.org.uk> wrote in message
news:840ail...@mid.individual.net...

It still sounds like your lighting circuit is running from a 16A MCB unless
I am misunderstanding something.

That would be amost unusual setup.

And YES, intall the immersion even if you do not wire it up.

Adam


John

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Apr 30, 2010, 3:12:58 PM4/30/10
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"NT" <meow...@care2.com> wrote in message
news:4280e912-6b19-4d6b...@n15g2000yqf.googlegroups.com...


NT

What??

Wiring 2 x 3kW heaters in series will still take a 3kW load. I assume you
mean they are 1.5kw per element. That would need checking carefully.


Harry Bloomfield

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Apr 30, 2010, 4:00:33 PM4/30/10
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John pretended :

> Wiring 2 x 3kW heaters in series will still take a 3kW load. I assume you
> mean they are 1.5kw per element. That would need checking carefully.

No, two 3kw elements wired in series would double the resistance and
half the wattage/current demand.

--
Regards,
Harry (M1BYT) (L)
http://www.ukradioamateur.co.uk


John Rumm

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Apr 30, 2010, 4:47:08 PM4/30/10
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No, because at 16A there is a fair chance that light fittings and
pendent flexes will be inadequately fault protected. Note also then any
SES or SBC fittings are only rated for use on circuits up to 6A - so
even a 10A MCB would be to much.

--
Cheers,

John.

/=================================================================\
| Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk |
|-----------------------------------------------------------------|
| John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk |
\=================================================================/

Roger Mills

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Apr 30, 2010, 4:55:48 PM4/30/10
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In an earlier contribution to this discussion, David Hearn

What size of cable does the circuit use? Lighting circuits are usually wired
in 1.0 or 1.5 mm^2 cable - which wouldn't be adequately protected by a 16A
fuse - the cable would probably overheat before the fuse blew!

Immersion heaters should really have their own dedicated circuit (not sure
whether it's mandatory?) but, for occasional use, you could in practice get
away with powering it via a fused spur from a ring main - but *not* from a
lighting circuit!
--
Cheers,
Roger
_______
Please reply to Newsgroup. Whilst email address is valid, it is seldom
checked.


Dave Plowman (News)

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Apr 30, 2010, 6:34:43 PM4/30/10
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In article <840ug0...@mid.individual.net>,

Roger Mills <watt....@googlemail.com> wrote:
> What size of cable does the circuit use? Lighting circuits are usually
> wired in 1.0 or 1.5 mm^2 cable - which wouldn't be adequately protected
> by a 16A fuse - the cable would probably overheat before the fuse blew!

1.5mm cable is rated at a max of 16 amps. So if the cable run was such it
didn't have to be de-rated, it would be safe. And likely adequate for a 3
Kw load. Although most would use 2.5mm.

--
*Gargling is a good way to see if your throat leaks.

Andy Wade

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Apr 30, 2010, 6:59:29 PM4/30/10
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John Rumm wrote:
>
> Note also then any SES or SBC fittings are only rated for use on
> circuits up to 6A - so even a 10A MCB would be to much.

The old 6 A limitation for SES (E14) and SBC (B15) lampholders has been
removed in the 17th edition and these holders are now allowed on
circuits up to 16 A [reg. 559.6.1.6].

However (i) lighting circuits exceeding 10 A are rarely required in
domestic installations and (ii) an immersion heater should have a
separate circuit; combining it with a lighting circuit is totally
non-standard - quite bizarre in fact - and would fail to meet the
requirement for safe and convenient division of an installation [section
314] IMHO.

--
Andy

NT

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Apr 30, 2010, 7:56:59 PM4/30/10
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On Apr 30, 9:00 pm, Harry Bloomfield

<harry.m1...@NOSPAM.tiscali.co.uk> wrote:
> John pretended :
>
> > Wiring 2 x 3kW heaters in series will still take a 3kW load. I assume you
> > mean they are 1.5kw per element. That would need checking carefully.
>
> No, two 3kw elements wired in series would double the resistance and
> half the wattage/current demand.

Yeah. A bodge, but safe enough and ok for backup use.


NT

John Rumm

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Apr 30, 2010, 9:49:12 PM4/30/10
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Andy Wade wrote:
> John Rumm wrote:
>>
>> Note also then any SES or SBC fittings are only rated for use on
>> circuits up to 6A - so even a 10A MCB would be to much.
>
> The old 6 A limitation for SES (E14) and SBC (B15) lampholders has been
> removed in the 17th edition and these holders are now allowed on
> circuits up to 16 A [reg. 559.6.1.6].

Well spotted - I had not noticed that!

Retract that bit then!

Was that just a change in the rule, or has there been a shift in
manufacturing quality / spec of the fittings to match?

> However (i) lighting circuits exceeding 10 A are rarely required in
> domestic installations and (ii) an immersion heater should have a
> separate circuit; combining it with a lighting circuit is totally
> non-standard - quite bizarre in fact - and would fail to meet the
> requirement for safe and convenient division of an installation [section
> 314] IMHO.

Yup agree with that...

Graham.

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May 1, 2010, 9:33:22 AM5/1/10
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"John" <Who90...@ntlworld.com> wrote in message news:%YFCn.42212$DV5....@newsfe07.ams2...

<ink=red>
0/10
See me.

--
Graham.

%Profound_observation%


NT

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May 1, 2010, 5:18:45 PM5/1/10
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On May 1, 2:33 pm, "Graham." <m...@privacy.net> wrote:
> "John" <Who90nos...@ntlworld.com> wrote in messagenews:%YFCn.42212$DV5....@newsfe07.ams2...
>
> > "NT" <meow2...@care2.com> wrote in messagenews:4280e912-6b19-4d6b...@n15g2000yqf.googlegroups.com...

Perhaps he has 340v mains? :) Then he'd be right.


NT

John

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May 1, 2010, 6:00:42 PM5/1/10
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"NT" <meow...@care2.com> wrote in message
news:e24af738-4310-459b...@o8g2000yqo.googlegroups.com...


NT

Done detention!


Message has been deleted

Andy Wade

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May 1, 2010, 7:00:21 PM5/1/10
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John Rumm wrote:

> Andy Wade wrote:
>>
>> The old 6 A limitation for SES (E14) and SBC (B15) lampholders has
>> been removed in the 17th edition and these holders are now allowed on
>> circuits up to 16 A [reg. 559.6.1.6].
>
> Well spotted - I had not noticed that!
>
> Retract that bit then!
>
> Was that just a change in the rule, or has there been a shift in
> manufacturing quality / spec of the fittings to match?

Pass. Possibly related to a change from old BS to newer BS EN
(harmonised) standards, or quite possibly someone noticing an ancient
rule that never had much scientific basis.

--
Andy

spamlet

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May 2, 2010, 10:56:24 AM5/2/10
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"spamlet" <spam.m...@spamola.invalid> wrote in message
news:%6DCn.9624$fQ1....@newsfe13.ams2...

Oops: just browsing back: I hope you noticed the slip of the brain and
didn't try to empty the tank via the *cold* tap on the bath! Hot tap of
course!

:-(


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