Spur feed to garden shed...
"BigWallop" wrote in message
...
"Me" wrote in message
...
Hi
Comments, please. I've read history in this group, consulted the Wiring
Regs and the OSG. I
can find nothing that precludes me from implementing my preferred design
for a power feed to the
garden shed.
I intend to take feed from kitchen ring main through a DP switch and a
13A
fused spur unit to a
4mm.sq SWA cable running to the shed. I intend to fit some RCD
protected
mains sockets in the
shed, and take a feed through a 5A fused plate for lighting. The SWA
cable is 3 core so I get a
4mm earth as well as the armour. The cable is burried at 400mm in an
old
metal pipe and plastic
tape above. The house istallation is PME and I have test equipment to
check earth loop
impedence etc once the job is done. I will rely on the earth from the
house (rather than treat
the shed as a TT, float the earth at the shed end and drop an
electrode).
The load in the shed
is minimal, including the use of power tools and garden tools and while
I
may install a small
freezer I will accept a trip risk.
I have considerable DIY electrical experience and I would not as a
matter
of personal preference
take a spur off the kitchen ring but I have no spare ways on the CU
whuch
is towards the front
of the house which has concrete floors and there's no viable cable
route.
My only other
possibility would be a feed from the Cooker Unit (this is a serious
possibility if we put in a
gas cooker when the kitchen is refurbed!).
Can anyone point me to any breach of regs or problems in the above
design - I know it's not
ideal, but it is a considered design.
Thanks
John
Wouldn't it be easier to take a two way consumer unit from your meter or
doubled up with the mains switch in the existing CU, and then run the SWA
supply from that. You say you have three cores in the SWA, so it would
allow for the lighting and power to be drawn from the red and yellow cores
and share the black as a neutral. You'll still have the armour as a decent
earth to a metal clad junction box in the shed, or spike it at the shed
end
and reinforce the bonding to ground from there as it wouldn't hurt to give
any extra. This way it is on its own and will not effect the house supply
if a fault is detected in the shed.
It would be better but not easier, as OP said
the CU which
is towards the front
of the house which has concrete floors and there's no viable cable
route.
Personally I see no problem as long as the sockets that will be used for
power tools are RCD protected.
Adam
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