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.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Aenuff
 
Posts: n/a
Default Fused Spur with Timer & Thermostat, electrical suppliers?

TLC have a fused spur with built in digital 7 day timer for about £40 but my
local supplier had a discontinued one in their cataloge that also had a
thermostat built in.

Basically I need about 10 of these to wire up storage radiators. No they're
not on economy seven, are just on a normal ring. At the moment they simply
plug into a socket with a timer on the plug! It works but people keep
unplugging / bypassing the timers etc. Considering these are all new heaters
I'd like to have them hard wired to a spur.

Anyone got any good online electrical suppliers who might do a similar item
rated up to about 3Kw cheaply, ie. less than £40?

Tony


  #2   Report Post  
Dave Plowman
 
Posts: n/a
Default Fused Spur with Timer & Thermostat, electrical suppliers?

In article ,
Aenuff wrote:
Basically I need about 10 of these to wire up storage radiators. No
they're not on economy seven, are just on a normal ring. At the moment
they simply plug into a socket with a timer on the plug! It works but
people keep unplugging / bypassing the timers etc. Considering these are
all new heaters I'd like to have them hard wired to a spur.


But wouldn't those same people just alter the time switch to bypass it?

--
*Why doesn't glue stick to the inside of the bottle?

Dave Plowman London SW 12
RIP Acorn
  #3   Report Post  
Christian McArdle
 
Posts: n/a
Default Fused Spur with Timer & Thermostat, electrical suppliers?

Anyone got any good online electrical suppliers who might do a similar
item
rated up to about 3Kw cheaply, ie. less than £40?


If you find one, please post the results. I'm going to need one for my shed,
but haven't found any. It is basically a programmable thermostat with 13-16A
contacts and a fuse. Easy enough to do with a relay and FCU, but these take
up more space.

Christian.


  #4   Report Post  
Aenuff
 
Posts: n/a
Default Fused Spur with Timer & Thermostat, electrical suppliers?


"Dave Plowman" wrote in message
...
In article ,
Aenuff wrote:
Basically I need about 10 of these to wire up storage radiators. No
they're not on economy seven, are just on a normal ring. At the moment
they simply plug into a socket with a timer on the plug! It works but
people keep unplugging / bypassing the timers etc. Considering these are
all new heaters I'd like to have them hard wired to a spur.


But wouldn't those same people just alter the time switch to bypass it?

--
*Why doesn't glue stick to the inside of the bottle?

Dave Plowman London SW 12
RIP Acorn


Possibly but its a lot more intimidating for someone to change a hardwired
digital timer than a £5 plug in mechanical "thingy" plus they can't take off
the timer just plug the heater straight into the socket.

Its the best idea I've seen so far, thats not to say someone here hasn't got
a better one (hoping?)

Cheers

Tony


  #5   Report Post  
Christian McArdle
 
Posts: n/a
Default Fused Spur with Timer & Thermostat, electrical suppliers?

Possibly but its a lot more intimidating for someone to change a hardwired
digital timer than a £5 plug in mechanical "thingy" plus they can't take

off
the timer just plug the heater straight into the socket.


If this is more of a security issue, perhaps a central timer in a secure
location might be more appropriate, with just a 13A thermostat/FCU at the
heating position. Unfortunately, this may involve some wiring, although that
should probably be done anyway, as you shouldn't really use a ring main for
fixed electric heating.

Just using a local programmer, the timer controls can be overridden by the
user.

Christian.




  #6   Report Post  
 
Posts: n/a
Default Fused Spur with Timer & Thermostat, electrical suppliers?

In uk.d-i-y, Aenuff wrote:

Basically I need about 10 of these to wire up storage radiators. No they're
not on economy seven, are just on a normal ring. At the moment they simply
plug into a socket with a timer on the plug! It works but people keep
unplugging / bypassing the timers etc. Considering these are all new heaters
I'd like to have them hard wired to a spur.

Gag. 10 storage heaters, on 'a' ring? You jest, surely: even for the
lowest-rating storage heaters of 1kW you'd have 10kW = 40A loading on that
poor little ring; with 2kW jobbies you'd have 80A! And if your tenants,
students, migrant workers or whatever keep bypassing the timer, maybe
they're cold, meaning the heaters are underpowered for the job they're
trying to do? Are all these heaters in one property with one main supply,
or are they spread among several houses?

Fixed heaters in regular use like these ought to have their own dedicated
radial circuits (1-2 heaters per circuit depending on their rating). Then
you can run dedicated switching for them back at/near the consumer unit (hmm,
sounds just like an Economy7 setup, doesn't it?). Immersion-heater timers
switch up to 3kW, and in some out-of-the-way padlocked cupboard might be
good enough for your needs; beyond that lies the realm of control systems
and contactors. But can you really not fork out for pukka dedicated-circuit
Economy7 in the property/ies? Then you get your time-switching done for
you, with no occupier intervention, and a far cheaper rate for the
nighttime electricity thrown in... Or even a gas-powered wet CH system,
if the property/ies have a mains gas supply!?

Stefek
  #7   Report Post  
Aenuff
 
Posts: n/a
Default Fused Spur with Timer & Thermostat, electrical suppliers?


wrote in message
...
In uk.d-i-y, Aenuff wrote:

Basically I need about 10 of these to wire up storage radiators. No

they're
not on economy seven, are just on a normal ring. At the moment they

simply
plug into a socket with a timer on the plug! It works but people keep
unplugging / bypassing the timers etc. Considering these are all new

heaters
I'd like to have them hard wired to a spur.

Gag. 10 storage heaters, on 'a' ring? You jest, surely: even for the
lowest-rating storage heaters of 1kW you'd have 10kW = 40A loading on that
poor little ring; with 2kW jobbies you'd have 80A! And if your tenants,
students, migrant workers or whatever keep bypassing the timer, maybe
they're cold, meaning the heaters are underpowered for the job they're
trying to do? Are all these heaters in one property with one main supply,
or are they spread among several houses?

Fixed heaters in regular use like these ought to have their own dedicated
radial circuits (1-2 heaters per circuit depending on their rating). Then
you can run dedicated switching for them back at/near the consumer unit

(hmm,
sounds just like an Economy7 setup, doesn't it?). Immersion-heater timers
switch up to 3kW, and in some out-of-the-way padlocked cupboard might be
good enough for your needs; beyond that lies the realm of control systems
and contactors. But can you really not fork out for pukka

dedicated-circuit
Economy7 in the property/ies? Then you get your time-switching done for
you, with no occupier intervention, and a far cheaper rate for the
nighttime electricity thrown in... Or even a gas-powered wet CH system,
if the property/ies have a mains gas supply!?

Stefek


Stefek, as usual your response is perfectly correct and my OP probably a bit
misleading. To clarify...

10 heaters, 3 x 3.4Kw + 7 x 1.7Kw spread across 4, possibly 5 - need to
double check, separate rings. No more than 2 x 1.7 and 2 x 3.4s on any one
ring. The building is three phase. We can get economy 7 but no budget for 2
years by which time there should be a budget for an oil fired zoned system
with a couple of boilers covering the 2 main halves of the building.

All good fun!

Tony


  #8   Report Post  
Christian McArdle
 
Posts: n/a
Default Fused Spur with Timer & Thermostat, electrical suppliers?

10 heaters, 3 x 3.4Kw + 7 x 1.7Kw spread across 4, possibly 5 - need to
double check, separate rings. No more than 2 x 1.7 and 2 x 3.4s on any one
ring.


When you say ring, you mean general purpose socket circuit? When you say
2x1.7kW and 2x3.4kW on one ring, you mean 10.2kW, or over 42A on a 32A
circuit shared with other things? You've got a lot of diversity to find to
get that lot working!

Christian.


  #9   Report Post  
 
Posts: n/a
Default Fused Spur with Timer & Thermostat, electrical suppliers?

Aenuff wrote:

10 heaters, 3 x 3.4Kw + 7 x 1.7Kw spread across 4, possibly 5 - need to
double check, separate rings. No more than 2 x 1.7 and 2 x 3.4s on any one
ring. The building is three phase. We can get economy 7 but no budget for 2
years by which time there should be a budget for an oil fired zoned system
with a couple of boilers covering the 2 main halves of the building.

Even 2 x 1.7 and 2 x 3.4 is marginal:-

Total of 10.2 kW, at 230 volts that's 44 amps, much too much for a
ring circuit.

Even 2 x 3.4 kW is 29.5 amps leaving very little for anything else.

--
Chris Green
Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Update: Adding a wireless room thermostat (help needed) JH UK diy 9 January 18th 04 01:39 PM
16A fused spur Christian McArdle UK diy 19 October 14th 03 01:41 PM
fused spur c3p0 UK diy 5 September 25th 03 04:37 PM
New Electrical Regs PoP UK diy 22 September 1st 03 08:41 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:21 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 DIYbanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about DIY & home improvement"