My new planner thicknesser is wired to a 13 amp plug on a ring main dedicated for my power tools in my garage. The MCB circuit breaker is rated at 32 amps, the cable is 2.5mm armoured cable, so the system can easily deal with any power that the 2.75 kW motor should pull. 13 amp fuses are able to handle 3 kW. However, when the planner is switched on there is quite a spike of current draw which often blows the 13 amp fuse. Once the motor is running I have never blown a fuse, even under load. I have tried using so-called "slow blow" fuses but they also tend to blow when the motor is switched on.
Now, I could have one of the standard 3 pin wall sockets replaced by a "16 amp" blue socket and use a "16 amp" blue plug. However, as far as I can see, these so called 16 amp blue plugs don't actually have a fuse in them at all. In which case, I'd be relying on the 32 amp MCB, which seems a bit too high.
Does anyone know of a fused 16 amp blue plug?
It's actually a pity that the planner manufacturers didn't include some form of slow start for the motor to avoid this problem entirely.
Now, I could have one of the standard 3 pin wall sockets replaced by a "16 amp" blue socket and use a "16 amp" blue plug. However, as far as I can see, these so called 16 amp blue plugs don't actually have a fuse in them at all. In which case, I'd be relying on the 32 amp MCB, which seems a bit too high.
Does anyone know of a fused 16 amp blue plug?
It's actually a pity that the planner manufacturers didn't include some form of slow start for the motor to avoid this problem entirely.