tggzzz wrote: ↑Thu Jul 11, 2024 8:20 am
Zenith wrote: ↑Thu Jul 11, 2024 7:56 am
Circumstances can be devised where a ring main supplying 90m² could be operating at or beyond its limits.
Obviously, it's advisable to stay within the rules, and that's usually easy.
Just so. It was the "any number" that surprised me. Fortunately freezers don't take much power, except for a second when starting!
Insurance company would check the limits very carefully, post hoc.
The local shop decided to fit half a dozen air conditioning units. They must have had a very persuasive salesman round.
They have about 10 chilled cabinets and four or five freezers with clear tops, plus maybe 1kW of lights etc permanently on. They asked me why the main trip blew several times a day. I had a look at the rather ancient fuse board. I explained that they had all these things rated at about about 1kW plus an impressive number of air conditioning units, all of which spent a small %age of their time turned on. Especially in hot weather, the likelihood that they would all be turned on at the same time was considerable. If that happened there'd be enough load to trigger the trip. If they triggered the trip, they'd have to switch some units off, to avoid having it trigger immediately they reset it. I had to draw a diagram to explain it. They either had to:
Upgrade the supply - probably expensive - and the rest of the wiring might be inspected and have to be replaced - painfully expensive.
Have a management system to supervise the loading. Either hideously expensive, or immense fun to design and implement yourself. They wouldn't have seen this as great fun, but more of a cruel and unusual self-inflicted torment.
Get rid of all those air-conditioning units.
They got rid of all but one air-conditioning unit and the problems disappeared.
Insurance companies would check that and all sorts of other things to avoid paying out.
Friends were making an insurance claim and a woman came to visit them and explained the she was a Loss Adjuster and did they know what that meant. Peter said, "Yes, it's someone who attempts to browbeat people into accepting lower payments than they are entitled to". She didn't manage to adjust the losses in their case.