View Single Post
  #36   Report Post  
Posted to uk.d-i-y
NY NY is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,863
Default 415V sticker in household meter box

"newshound" wrote in message
o.uk...
You still havn't answered the question, do you think I have three phases
coming into the master fuse block?


If you hacksaw into it, you might be able to see how many conductors
there are.

Report back when you've counted them.


I think I asked a perfectly reasonable question. Adam seemed to be
asserting that the cabling was there to the board, which surprised me a
little.


I think you asked a very sensible question and clearly set out that it was
theoretical because you aren't actually at your father's house to look at
the installation and answer further questions - so you wanted to be armed
with the things to look out for when you next see him. In the meantime you
were asking a theoretical "how is it normally done" question, with the
proviso that there are bound to be exceptions to any rule.

I'm shocked at the amount of flak that you've had from some people who have
nothing to contribute except to strengthen my opinion that they exist on the
newsgroup just to be prize ****s and to indulge in private vendettas.
Mentioning no names...


Is three-phase (or at least two-phase or split-phase) wiring common in
domestic UK environments? I've only ever seen it in the US where their
normal wall-socket voltage is so puny that heavy-duty appliances like tumble
driers, electric fires and even electric kettles (for those people who use a
kettle to make coffee or tea) are fed from phase-to-phase rather than the
normal phase-to-neutral, to avoid needing heavier-duty wiring to supply the
large amount of power from 120V.