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electrical spur

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agamad | 17:57 Thu 24th Sep 2009 | DIY
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Can anybody tell me what the minimum cable size for a spur is and what is the rating of the protection device at the consumer unit?
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is it a spur from a 32 amp final ring circuit?
In other words, is it a spur off the 13A ring main of sockets.
If it is, the cable used is the same as the ring main - 2.5 mm squared conductor T&E.
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No, its direct from the consumer unit.
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...and how many sockets can be safety supplied by the spur?
That's not a spur Agamad................ that's a radial cicuit ............ what do you want to use it for?
............. and I'm afraid to disappoint you, but you can't (legally) add extra circuits (ring or radial) off the CU unless you are a registered electrician or you make a separate Building Regs application (about £120) to have someone check what you've done afterwards.
You can add a spur yourself, provided you know what you are doing - unless it's in the kitchen.
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A friend of a friend (honest!) wants to make use of defunct storage rad circuits. I think he intends to put a couple of double sockets on the end of it. I dont know what the current condutor size is or the fuse rating in the CU. Just looking for the minimum spec.
Depends on the size of the cable running to the storage rads.
It will either be 2.5mm square area or 4mm square area (2.5mm square is the size of a normal ring main cable).
If he's got a radial circuit and he's got 2.5mm cable, protect each circuit with a 16A MCB and fit one double socket on the end of each.
If he's got 4mm square cable and a radial circuit, still protect with a 16A and put one double socket on the end - because one isn't allowed more than one double on a spur. The cabling size of 4mm would cope with up to 32A load, but there's no point upping the breaker size.
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Thanks BM.

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