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What does 'wired-in' mean?
probably a daft question, my friend wants a cooker (cheap) for a flat he rents out - and has found this one :
http://www.ikea.com/gb/en/catalog/products/50094727 It says 'Wired-in installation' - and since I am the expert with ovens, he's asked me what it means... Personally I'm thinking that since his existing cooker has a cooker switch, which then links to a normal socket, in to which his current cooker plugs in, it should just be a case of attaching a plug and connecting it up. |
Re: What does 'wired-in' mean?
I think 'wired in' means it has to be connected directly to the cooker switch outlet & is switched on & off by the big red switch on it....
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Re: What does 'wired-in' mean?
It means it needs (or at least is designed) to be wired into a cooker switch. At 1.2KW you would be safe connecting a 13A plug onto it, but its not supposed to have one and it goes against regulations to have one.
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Re: What does 'wired-in' mean?
I think it means that it cannot be connected via a plug and as such has to be "wired in"
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Re: What does 'wired-in' mean?
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Re: What does 'wired-in' mean?
Cobbydaler is right Mr_love_monkey it requires a spark to connect, the total load is to great for a 13amp plug.
good forum here for trade advice http://www.screwfix.com/talk/index.jspa |
Re: What does 'wired-in' mean?
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Re: What does 'wired-in' mean?
guess he'd better find one that can just be plugged in then :)
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Re: What does 'wired-in' mean?
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Re: What does 'wired-in' mean?
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---------- Post added at 06:52 ---------- Previous post was at 06:47 ---------- Quote:
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Re: What does 'wired-in' mean?
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When you have seen a cooker switch and socket next to it, the two are totally seperate entities each(the switch does not control the socket), the switch will be a DPST(double pole single throw) type which means that it cuts off both the live and neatral supply, there is normally then a cable taken from the switch to a junction box on the wall behind where the cooker would sit to allow for the cooker to be wired in. The important thing here is that the switch isolates both sides of the supply and not just the live(as in the case of a normal plug socket), electrical regulations have been made that stat that a cooker must have this kind of isolation. If you go against this and wire it in a non-regulation way, you're leaving yourself open to prosecution under Part P of the building regulations(amongst others). |
Re: What does 'wired-in' mean?
Sorry, I think there is some misunderstanding here.
There is a traditional cooker 'big red switch' on the wall - this red switch controls a socket under the counter, behind the cooker, which the cooker plugs into. I'm not talking about pluging it into a 'normal' socket - I'm talking about plugging it into a socket that is controlled by the big red switch - which is where the current cooker is currently plugged into. |
Re: What does 'wired-in' mean?
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Is there a socket outlet nearby that it will plug into, if so, is it on a ringmain or a radial and what fuse / trip size is on the circuit. HTH ---------- Post added at 08:53 ---------- Previous post was at 08:51 ---------- Quote:
When you say there is a socket under the switch, is it a convetional 3 pin 13 amp type, if so, go for it, looks like its been adapted previously :tu: |
Re: What does 'wired-in' mean?
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Excellent - thanks - thought it should work like that, but wanted to check |
Re: What does 'wired-in' mean?
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HTH EDIT: I take it there isn't a hob, if there is, forget my comment about downgrading the fuse :tu: |
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