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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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Thanks to a monumental bit of DIY idiocy by yours truly, my daughter is
getting a nice new mains incomer to her Victorian flat that she's just bought. As it happens, it would be nice to move the meter and consumer unit from their present position and now would probably be a good time to ask the electricity board folk if they could move the meter. The trouble is, it might take a wee while to get a sparky organised to move the consumer unit close to the repositioned meter (assuming that this might happen). How far away from an existing consumer unit can a meter be moved? It would be nice to put the meter in another room but if that's not possible, a high level meter and consumer unit (just 1.5 to 2m from present position) would be a lot less visually intrusive. No doubt everything has to be low level and accessible these days though. Is a high level meter and consumer unit allowed? Tim |
#2
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In article ,
Tim+ writes: Thanks to a monumental bit of DIY idiocy by yours truly, my daughter is getting a nice new mains incomer to her Victorian flat that she's just bought. As it happens, it would be nice to move the meter and consumer unit from their present position and now would probably be a good time to ask the electricity board folk if they could move the meter. The trouble is, it might take a wee while to get a sparky organised to move the consumer unit close to the repositioned meter (assuming that this might happen). How far away from an existing consumer unit can a meter be moved? Any distance you like. If it's more than 3m, then they will usually require a switchfuse next to the meter (the exact limit depends on the local supply network policy and staff). It would be nice to put the meter in another room but if that's not possible, a high level meter and consumer unit (just 1.5 to 2m from present position) would be a lot less visually intrusive. No doubt everything has to be low level and accessible these days though. Is a high level meter and consumer unit allowed? If that floor of the house currently conforms to Part M of the building regs on height of electrical accessories, then yes, it should be accessible.) -- Andrew Gabriel [email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup] |
#3
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On Monday, 15 June 2015 22:09:54 UTC+1, Tim+ wrote:
Thanks to a monumental bit of DIY idiocy by yours truly, my daughter is getting a nice new mains incomer Oh do tell ... Anyway, if you leave a nice switchfuse ready for the meter-mover, eg http://www.tlc-direct.co.uk/Products/CGMSF100.html then he will connect the meter to the supply side of that and test. (You should also leave appropriate main equipotential bonding to the main earth terminal and a flying earth lead available if the earthing is supplied by the supplier.) You can then extend from the switchfuse to the consumer unit after he's gone with any ropey old bit of flex you can find :-) Owain |
#4
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wrote:
On Monday, 15 June 2015 22:09:54 UTC+1, Tim+ wrote: Thanks to a monumental bit of DIY idiocy by yours truly, my daughter is getting a nice new mains incomer Oh do tell ... Weeeell, this was this manky old bit of small bore copper pipe behind a door frame and leading up to where it looked like there has been an old gas light fitting on the other side of the wall. Couldn't decide whether it was an odd water pipe size or a redundant gas pipe. We didn't really want the pipe there as a new shower enclosure is planned for that area. The obvious way to find out seemed to be to drill a hole and see what dribbled out (after turning off water and gas). Turned out to be full of sparks. ;-) Electricity board came out and as we'd blown a fuse somewhere that had cut off the upstairs flats and the terraced neighbour, they had to find the single incomer for all the flats (which took them *ages). Turned out that like the bypass plans in the Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy, it was very helpfully hidden in a back bedroom, behind a false wall, behind a radiator. Anyhow, long story short, as the set-up is archaic they are going to upgrade the incomers to all the properties gratis. Anyway, if you leave a nice switchfuse ready for the meter-mover, eg http://www.tlc-direct.co.uk/Products/CGMSF100.html then he will connect the meter to the supply side of that and test. (You should also leave appropriate main equipotential bonding to the main earth terminal and a flying earth lead available if the earthing is supplied by the supplier.) You can then extend from the switchfuse to the consumer unit after he's gone with any ropey old bit of flex you can find :-) Thanks, that's very helpful. As a follow up question, at present a bundle of wires converge on the present consumer unit (small house, just 6 fuses). If the consumer unit was moved would the sparky just extend all the present wires with joins/connectors or is it more complicated than that? Tim Tim |
#5
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On Mon, 15 Jun 2015 23:21:30 +0100, Tim+ wrote:
Thanks to a monumental bit of DIY idiocy by yours truly, my daughter is getting a nice new mains incomer Oh do tell ... Weeeell, this was this manky old bit of small bore copper pipe behind a door frame and leading up to where it looked like there has been an old gas light fitting on the other side of the wall. Couldn't decide whether it was an odd water pipe size or a redundant gas pipe. We didn't really want the pipe there as a new shower enclosure is planned for that area. The obvious way to find out seemed to be to drill a hole and see what dribbled out (after turning off water and gas). Turned out to be full of sparks. ;-) Bet that gave you a surprise, if you were thinking it was gas... Electricity board came out and as we'd blown a fuse somewhere that had cut off the upstairs flats and the terraced neighbour, they had to find the single incomer for all the flats (which took them *ages). Turned out that like the bypass plans in the Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy, it was very helpfully hidden in a back bedroom, behind a false wall, behind a radiator. Anyhow, long story short, as the set-up is archaic they are going to upgrade the incomers to all the properties gratis. Anybody'd think you knew that and did it deliberately... |
#6
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On Monday, 15 June 2015 23:21:33 UTC+1, Tim+ wrote:
Weeeell, this was this manky old bit of small bore copper pipe behind a door frame ... Turned out to be full of sparks. ;-) Sounds like a nice piece of pyro. As a follow up question, at present a bundle of wires converge on the present consumer unit (small house, just 6 fuses). If the consumer unit was moved would the sparky just extend all the present wires with joins/connectors or is it more complicated than that? DIN rail terminals in an enclosure have been used in the past http://www.cucumber.demon.co.uk/cu1.jpg but then you have to extend 6x circuit cables to the new CU location, so running extended tails may be easier. At least temporarily. See observations made in thread https://groups.google.com/forum/#!to...-y/qA2l4MD4ppM Owain |
#7
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On Mon, 15 Jun 2015 22:52:59 +0000 (UTC), Adrian
wrote: On Mon, 15 Jun 2015 23:21:30 +0100, Tim+ wrote: Thanks to a monumental bit of DIY idiocy by yours truly, my daughter is getting a nice new mains incomer Oh do tell ... Weeeell, this was this manky old bit of small bore copper pipe behind a door frame and leading up to where it looked like there has been an old gas light fitting on the other side of the wall. Couldn't decide whether it was an odd water pipe size or a redundant gas pipe. We didn't really want the pipe there as a new shower enclosure is planned for that area. The obvious way to find out seemed to be to drill a hole and see what dribbled out (after turning off water and gas). Turned out to be full of sparks. ;-) Bet that gave you a surprise, if you were thinking it was gas... Electricity board came out and as we'd blown a fuse somewhere that had cut off the upstairs flats and the terraced neighbour, they had to find the single incomer for all the flats (which took them *ages). Turned out that like the bypass plans in the Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy, it was very helpfully hidden in a back bedroom, behind a false wall, behind a radiator. Anyhow, long story short, as the set-up is archaic they are going to upgrade the incomers to all the properties gratis. Anybody'd think you knew that and did it deliberately... I suppose that's what they call Pyro technics. -- Graham. %Profound_observation% |
#8
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On 15/06/15 22:09, Tim+ wrote:
Thanks to a monumental bit of DIY idiocy by yours truly, my daughter is getting a nice new mains incomer to her Victorian flat that she's just bought. As it happens, it would be nice to move the meter and consumer unit from their present position and now would probably be a good time to ask the electricity board folk if they could move the meter. The trouble is, it might take a wee while to get a sparky organised to move the consumer unit close to the repositioned meter (assuming that this might happen). How far away from an existing consumer unit can a meter be moved? It would be nice to put the meter in another room but if that's not possible, a high level meter and consumer unit (just 1.5 to 2m from present position) would be a lot less visually intrusive. Ask the DNO (the supply operator, not the company you pay necessarily) - EDF (now UKPower) stipulated 3m max on the tails between meter and CU. I've heard of 5m in one case. If you exceed the max, the usual solution is to add a switch-fuse nearer the meter, then you can do what you like, subject to routing a cable that has no RCD protection. No doubt everything has to be low level and accessible these days though. Is a high level meter and consumer unit allowed? Part M is not retrospective generally so for a refurb you can stick it where you like. I had to put mine over a doorway as there was no other sensible location that would not have been a complete pain. |
#9
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On 15/06/15 22:22, Andrew Gabriel wrote:
If that floor of the house currently conforms to Part M of the building regs on height of electrical accessories, then yes, it should be accessible.) And there's a side case I may have overlooked. But a part M compliant floor will be obvious in that the sockets will be unusually high off the floor. |
#10
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On 15/06/15 23:21, Tim+ wrote:
wrote: On Monday, 15 June 2015 22:09:54 UTC+1, Tim+ wrote: Thanks to a monumental bit of DIY idiocy by yours truly, my daughter is getting a nice new mains incomer Oh do tell ... Weeeell, this was this manky old bit of small bore copper pipe behind a door frame and leading up to where it looked like there has been an old gas light fitting on the other side of the wall. Couldn't decide whether it was an odd water pipe size or a redundant gas pipe. We didn't really want the pipe there as a new shower enclosure is planned for that area. The obvious way to find out seemed to be to drill a hole and see what dribbled out (after turning off water and gas). Turned out to be full of sparks. ;-) Ah - so you had a feed in MICC. I've seen that done once. Electricity board came out and as we'd blown a fuse somewhere that had cut off the upstairs flats and the terraced neighbour, they had to find the single incomer for all the flats (which took them *ages). Bet you are Mr Popular! Turned out that like the bypass plans in the Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy, it was very helpfully hidden in a back bedroom, behind a false wall, behind a radiator. Anyhow, long story short, as the set-up is archaic they are going to upgrade the incomers to all the properties gratis. Anyway, if you leave a nice switchfuse ready for the meter-mover, eg http://www.tlc-direct.co.uk/Products/CGMSF100.html then he will connect the meter to the supply side of that and test. (You should also leave appropriate main equipotential bonding to the main earth terminal and a flying earth lead available if the earthing is supplied by the supplier.) You can then extend from the switchfuse to the consumer unit after he's gone with any ropey old bit of flex you can find :-) Thanks, that's very helpful. As a follow up question, at present a bundle of wires converge on the present consumer unit (small house, just 6 fuses). If the consumer unit was moved would the sparky just extend all the present wires with joins/connectors or is it more complicated than that? No - that's about the sum of it. Assuming he does not find any show stopping problems - he will test each circuit before reconnecting it. |
#11
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Andrew Gabriel wrote:
In article , Tim+ writes: Thanks to a monumental bit of DIY idiocy by yours truly, my daughter is getting a nice new mains incomer to her Victorian flat that she's just bought. As it happens, it would be nice to move the meter and consumer unit from their present position and now would probably be a good time to ask the electricity board folk if they could move the meter. The trouble is, it might take a wee while to get a sparky organised to move the consumer unit close to the repositioned meter (assuming that this might happen). How far away from an existing consumer unit can a meter be moved? Any distance you like. If it's more than 3m, then they will usually require a switchfuse next to the meter (the exact limit depends on the local supply network policy and staff). It would be nice to put the meter in another room but if that's not possible, a high level meter and consumer unit (just 1.5 to 2m from present position) would be a lot less visually intrusive. No doubt everything has to be low level and accessible these days though. Is a high level meter and consumer unit allowed? If that floor of the house currently conforms to Part M of the building regs on height of electrical accessories, then yes, it should be accessible.) Fortunately it doesn't. ;-) Tim |
#12
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On 2015-06-15, Tim+ wrote:
Weeeell, this was this manky old bit of small bore copper pipe behind a door frame and leading up to where it looked like there has been an old gas light fitting on the other side of the wall. Couldn't decide whether it was an odd water pipe size or a redundant gas pipe. We didn't really want the pipe there as a new shower enclosure is planned for that area. The obvious way to find out seemed to be to drill a hole and see what dribbled out (after turning off water and gas). Turned out to be full of sparks. ;-) Yikes! I guess you & the building are OK, though. Was it some kind of large mineral-insulated cable? (That's the only kind I can think of off-hand that looks like copper pipe.) |
#13
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On Tuesday, 16 June 2015 10:00:06 UTC+1, Adam Funk wrote:
Yikes! I guess you & the building are OK, though. Was it some kind of large mineral-insulated cable? (That's the only kind I can think of off-hand that looks like copper pipe.) Wouldn't have to be that large - if the original supply was 40 amp then 0.007 inch^2 is tabled at 45A; modern equivalent 4mm2 is only 7 mm external diameter. Owain |
#14
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Adam Funk wrote:
On 2015-06-15, Tim+ wrote: Weeeell, this was this manky old bit of small bore copper pipe behind a door frame and leading up to where it looked like there has been an old gas light fitting on the other side of the wall. Couldn't decide whether it was an odd water pipe size or a redundant gas pipe. We didn't really want the pipe there as a new shower enclosure is planned for that area. The obvious way to find out seemed to be to drill a hole and see what dribbled out (after turning off water and gas). Turned out to be full of sparks. ;-) Yikes! I guess you & the building are OK, though. Was it some kind of large mineral-insulated cable? (That's the only kind I can think of off-hand that looks like copper pipe.) Yep. Just monumental stupidity on my part. Just because I've never seen visible armoured cable in any house I've lived in isn't a good reason to assume that all copper pipe is just "pipe". ;-) Tim |
#15
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Well in a building I was in a while ago, the meters for the flats were in a
utility cupboard outside the flats, above the top shelf with a kickstep thing in the bottom so the reader can see it. I'd imagine after reading a few of these and going up and down the steps the reader would need knee replacement surgery! Brian -- From the Sofa of Brian Gaff Reply address is active "Andrew Gabriel" wrote in message ... In article , Tim+ writes: Thanks to a monumental bit of DIY idiocy by yours truly, my daughter is getting a nice new mains incomer to her Victorian flat that she's just bought. As it happens, it would be nice to move the meter and consumer unit from their present position and now would probably be a good time to ask the electricity board folk if they could move the meter. The trouble is, it might take a wee while to get a sparky organised to move the consumer unit close to the repositioned meter (assuming that this might happen). How far away from an existing consumer unit can a meter be moved? Any distance you like. If it's more than 3m, then they will usually require a switchfuse next to the meter (the exact limit depends on the local supply network policy and staff). It would be nice to put the meter in another room but if that's not possible, a high level meter and consumer unit (just 1.5 to 2m from present position) would be a lot less visually intrusive. No doubt everything has to be low level and accessible these days though. Is a high level meter and consumer unit allowed? If that floor of the house currently conforms to Part M of the building regs on height of electrical accessories, then yes, it should be accessible.) -- Andrew Gabriel [email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup] |
#16
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On 2015-06-16, Tim+ wrote:
Adam Funk wrote: On 2015-06-15, Tim+ wrote: Weeeell, this was this manky old bit of small bore copper pipe behind a door frame and leading up to where it looked like there has been an old gas light fitting on the other side of the wall. Couldn't decide whether it was an odd water pipe size or a redundant gas pipe. We didn't really want the pipe there as a new shower enclosure is planned for that area. The obvious way to find out seemed to be to drill a hole and see what dribbled out (after turning off water and gas). Turned out to be full of sparks. ;-) Yikes! I guess you & the building are OK, though. Was it some kind of large mineral-insulated cable? (That's the only kind I can think of off-hand that looks like copper pipe.) Yep. Just monumental stupidity on my part. Just because I've never seen visible armoured cable in any house I've lived in isn't a good reason to assume that all copper pipe is just "pipe". ;-) I've never (well, AFAIK, anyway) seen armored cable that looked like copper pipe (other than the MI that looks like microbore CH pipe). |
#17
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In article
, Tim+ wrote: Yikes! I guess you & the building are OK, though. Was it some kind of large mineral-insulated cable? (That's the only kind I can think of off-hand that looks like copper pipe.) Yep. Just monumental stupidity on my part. Just because I've never seen visible armoured cable in any house I've lived in isn't a good reason to assume that all copper pipe is just "pipe". ;-) Ages ago in Shepherds' Bush, London, a pal split a large house into three self contained flats. Each had its own meter, etc. The leccy board insisted the feed from the riser in the cellar to each meter was run in Pyro. SWA would have been easier as Pyro work hardens as it is bent. Seems at that time different leccy boards made the regs to suit themselves. -- *If one synchronized swimmer drowns, do the rest have to drown too? Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#18
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In article ,
Adam Funk wrote: I've never (well, AFAIK, anyway) seen armored cable that looked like copper pipe (other than the MI that looks like microbore CH pipe). The sort of MI you'd use as a main feed isn't like microbore CH pipe. ;-) -- *I'm pretty sure that sex is better than logic, but I can't prove it. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#19
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In article ,
Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Tim+ wrote: Yikes! I guess you & the building are OK, though. Was it some kind of large mineral-insulated cable? (That's the only kind I can think of off-hand that looks like copper pipe.) Yep. Just monumental stupidity on my part. Just because I've never seen visible armoured cable in any house I've lived in isn't a good reason to assume that all copper pipe is just "pipe". ;-) Ages ago in Shepherds' Bush, London, a pal split a large house into three self contained flats. Each had its own meter, etc. The leccy board insisted the feed from the riser in the cellar to each meter was run in Pyro. SWA would have been easier as Pyro work hardens as it is bent. Seems at that time different leccy boards made the regs to suit themselves. They did, my brother in law, in the midlands area, was reqwring his house and garage which then had to be checked. "You haven't got a lock on the garage, so it's a supply in a public place - we can't connect you." "But we'll wait while you go and buy a padlock." |
#20
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On 16/06/15 17:06, Adam Funk wrote:
I've never (well, AFAIK, anyway) seen armored cable that looked like copper pipe (other than the MI that looks like microbore CH pipe). Yeah - I think someone is confusing terms... I *have* seen MICC used as an extension to the incomer *before* the meter (well, 2nd meter) in a house. And it was quite chunky and as you say, could be confused with a bit of microbore. |
#21
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On 16/06/15 17:39, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , Adam Funk wrote: I've never (well, AFAIK, anyway) seen armored cable that looked like copper pipe (other than the MI that looks like microbore CH pipe). The sort of MI you'd use as a main feed isn't like microbore CH pipe. ;-) Well, it could be - around 10mm OD IIRC. Larger microbore... |
#22
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On 2015-06-16, Tim Watts wrote:
On 16/06/15 17:06, Adam Funk wrote: I've never (well, AFAIK, anyway) seen armored cable that looked like copper pipe (other than the MI that looks like microbore CH pipe). Yeah - I think someone is confusing terms... I *have* seen MICC used as an extension to the incomer *before* the meter (well, 2nd meter) in a house. And it was quite chunky and as you say, could be confused with a bit of microbore. Ah, OK. |
#23
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On 2015-06-16, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , Adam Funk wrote: I've never (well, AFAIK, anyway) seen armored cable that looked like copper pipe (other than the MI that looks like microbore CH pipe). The sort of MI you'd use as a main feed isn't like microbore CH pipe. ;-) No, I haven't seen it, but I don't claim that means it doesn't exist. Our main feed is one of those antique but sturdy ones with the steel tape coiled around it. It can't be mistaken for anything else in the house. ;-) |
#24
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"Tim Watts" wrote in message
... On 15/06/15 22:22, Andrew Gabriel wrote: If that floor of the house currently conforms to Part M of the building regs on height of electrical accessories, then yes, it should be accessible.) And there's a side case I may have overlooked. Tell them it's that high in case of flooding:-) You could get away with that one. As Part M only applys to new builds you are safe from the Part M police. -- Adam |
#25
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"Tim+" wrote in message
... Thanks to a monumental bit of DIY idiocy You have my sympathy following my work related cockup today. I was given permission by the landlord to gain entry into a disused shop that is booked in for a refit and the keys to the doors were missing. Just the one snag. I knew which shop it was from the front of the shopping center but when I went to the service area at the back of the shops I broke into the wrong shop -the staff in that shop were not happy. -- Adam |
#26
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In article ,
Tim Watts wrote: I *have* seen MICC used as an extension to the incomer *before* the meter (well, 2nd meter) in a house. And it was quite chunky and as you say, could be confused with a bit of microbore. No. More like 15mm tube. -- *Can vegetarians eat animal crackers? Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#27
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On Tuesday, 16 June 2015 21:20:12 UTC+1, ARW wrote:
"Tim+" wrote in message ... Thanks to a monumental bit of DIY idiocy You have my sympathy following my work related cockup today. I was given permission by the landlord to gain entry into a disused shop that is booked in for a refit and the keys to the doors were missing. Just the one snag. I knew which shop it was from the front of the shopping center but when I went to the service area at the back of the shops I broke into the wrong shop Oops. I'd love to hear what one of your apprentices thought of that act of genius. -the staff in that shop were not happy. Really? How strange. :-) |
#28
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ARW wrote:
I knew which shop it was from the front of the shopping center but when I went to the service area at the back of the shops I broke into the wrong shop -the staff in that shop were not happy. Several times I've waited at the front door to the flat above my shop waiting for a tradesman, only to have him phone me complaining that he's arrived and can't find the door. Turns out he's wandering around in the yard behind the shop next door. jgh |
#29
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On 16/06/2015 17:38, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , Tim+ wrote: Yikes! I guess you & the building are OK, though. Was it some kind of large mineral-insulated cable? (That's the only kind I can think of off-hand that looks like copper pipe.) Yep. Just monumental stupidity on my part. Just because I've never seen visible armoured cable in any house I've lived in isn't a good reason to assume that all copper pipe is just "pipe". ;-) Ages ago in Shepherds' Bush, London, a pal split a large house into three self contained flats. Each had its own meter, etc. The leccy board insisted the feed from the riser in the cellar to each meter was run in Pyro. SWA would have been easier as Pyro work hardens as it is bent. Seems at that time different leccy boards made the regs to suit themselves. No, at one time pyro' was the only fire resistant cable type available. (which is why it is used extensively in fire alarm installations) That would be why they specified it, fire reistance. --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: --- |
#30
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"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote:
In article , Tim Watts wrote: I *have* seen MICC used as an extension to the incomer *before* the meter (well, 2nd meter) in a house. And it was quite chunky and as you say, could be confused with a bit of microbore. No. More like 15mm tube. Actually 1/2". As suggested, this was between a shared incomer and the meter. https://www.dropbox.com/s/ap7oa6wzq6...mer2.jpeg?dl=0 The disconnected tails are for the feed to the flat whose cable I drilled through. https://www.dropbox.com/s/abtu9jj1nw...mer1.jpeg?dl=0 Note handy accessible position behind radiator and false wall (both removed). https://www.dropbox.com/s/al4wxazk5z...oops.jpeg?dl=0 What not to do. Tim |
#31
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"Martin Bonner" wrote in message
... On Tuesday, 16 June 2015 21:20:12 UTC+1, ARW wrote: "Tim+" wrote in message ... Thanks to a monumental bit of DIY idiocy You have my sympathy following my work related cockup today. I was given permission by the landlord to gain entry into a disused shop that is booked in for a refit and the keys to the doors were missing. Just the one snag. I knew which shop it was from the front of the shopping center but when I went to the service area at the back of the shops I broke into the wrong shop Oops. I'd love to hear what one of your apprentices thought of that act of genius. Well as one helped me break in then I can tell you he was ****ing himself when the alarm went off as the door opened and I said "Aw **** it's the wrong door". -- Adam |
#32
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On 2015-06-17, Tim+ wrote:
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , Tim Watts wrote: I *have* seen MICC used as an extension to the incomer *before* the meter (well, 2nd meter) in a house. And it was quite chunky and as you say, could be confused with a bit of microbore. No. More like 15mm tube. Actually 1/2". As suggested, this was between a shared incomer and the meter. https://www.dropbox.com/s/ap7oa6wzq6...mer2.jpeg?dl=0 The disconnected tails are for the feed to the flat whose cable I drilled through. https://www.dropbox.com/s/abtu9jj1nw...mer1.jpeg?dl=0 Note handy accessible position behind radiator and false wall (both removed). https://www.dropbox.com/s/al4wxazk5z...oops.jpeg?dl=0 What not to do. I see what you mean about it looking like pipework. |
#33
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On 2015-06-17, Martin Bonner wrote:
On Tuesday, 16 June 2015 21:20:12 UTC+1, ARW wrote: "Tim+" wrote in message ... Thanks to a monumental bit of DIY idiocy You have my sympathy following my work related cockup today. I was given permission by the landlord to gain entry into a disused shop that is booked in for a refit and the keys to the doors were missing. Just the one snag. I knew which shop it was from the front of the shopping center but when I went to the service area at the back of the shops I broke into the wrong shop Oops. I'd love to hear what one of your apprentices thought of that act of genius. Yeah, me too! OTOH, I'm sure this was an honest cock-up, not caused by futzing around on Facebook while hammering. |
#34
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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In article
, Tim+ wrote: "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , Tim Watts wrote: I *have* seen MICC used as an extension to the incomer *before* the meter (well, 2nd meter) in a house. And it was quite chunky and as you say, could be confused with a bit of microbore. No. More like 15mm tube. Actually 1/2". As suggested, this was between a shared incomer and the meter. The stuff I remember was MICC 2H16 and orange PVC covered. From memory, it looked larger than the common copper cold water pipe. Most of the MI you tend to see is much lower current therefore smaller. -- *The beatings will continue until morale improves * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#35
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On 17/06/2015 17:37, Ash Burton wrote:
On 16/06/2015 17:38, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Tim+ wrote: Yikes! I guess you & the building are OK, though. Was it some kind of large mineral-insulated cable? (That's the only kind I can think of off-hand that looks like copper pipe.) Yep. Just monumental stupidity on my part. Just because I've never seen visible armoured cable in any house I've lived in isn't a good reason to assume that all copper pipe is just "pipe". ;-) Ages ago in Shepherds' Bush, London, a pal split a large house into three self contained flats. Each had its own meter, etc. The leccy board insisted the feed from the riser in the cellar to each meter was run in Pyro. SWA would have been easier as Pyro work hardens as it is bent. Seems at that time different leccy boards made the regs to suit themselves. No, at one time pyro' was the only fire resistant cable type available. (which is why it is used extensively in fire alarm installations) That would be why they specified it, fire reistance. --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: --- Why do you need fire resistance for a fire alarm, shirley its better to do it like burglar alarms and sound the alarm if a wire burns through. It just needs SABs like burglar alarms. |
#36
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On 16/06/2015 21:19, ARW wrote:
"Tim+" wrote in message ... Thanks to a monumental bit of DIY idiocy You have my sympathy following my work related cockup today. I was given permission by the landlord to gain entry into a disused shop that is booked in for a refit and the keys to the doors were missing. Just the one snag. I knew which shop it was from the front of the shopping center but when I went to the service area at the back of the shops I broke into the wrong shop -the staff in that shop were not happy. I assume they are often not labelled to make it less easy for villains to pick the shop with the most attractive contents. |
#37
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Wednesday, 17 June 2015 20:45:18 UTC+1, dennis@home wrote:
Why do you need fire resistance for a fire alarm, shirley its better to do it like burglar alarms and sound the alarm if a wire burns through. It used to be the case that detector wiring didn't have to be in fire-safe cable as the detector circuits were monitored and the system would alarm. It just needs SABs like burglar alarms. Burglar alarms usually have one or two bells; fire alarm systems may have dozens or even hundreds in a large hotel requiring sounders near every bedhead. Burglar alarm bells are usually wired in multi-core cable and still don't usually have a bell battery feedback loop to the controller. The cabling and maintenance burden of hundreds of SABs all with individual batteries and all reporting back to the controller would be unwieldy. Burglar alarms are to provide warning of intrusion; they are not a primary security system and they are not a life protection system. Owain |
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