Cozzer
Established Member
It was time for a new oven.
Our 31 year old (wow!) Neff job was beginning to cause cooking problems, so we splashed out on a new Smeg number. Paid for delivery and fitting, but when it came to it, we were told that someone had bodged the wiring on the Neff and nearby 4 ring Beko ceramic hob, by cabling them together.
We had a stark choice : yes, the installer could do the same, but it would invalidate the Smeg warranty, or he could cable the hob and oven separately, but that would mean getting an electrician to add a cable back to the fuse box...not handy in our case, courtesy of a concrete floor in between. (Yes, the same concrete floor that is involved in our boiler F22 error farce! See other thread!)
He then states that the new oven is "too powerful" to connect in the same bad/old way, so leaves us with the new oven connected, but the hob not.
We have an electrician neighbour, who eventually called round to have a gander....
I don't understand about electricity, so I'll give you some numbers in an effort to get to grips with this, if I may.
We have an old bridge-type fuse box. The cooker fuse wire is rated at 30A.
The new Smeg features a sticker claiming 3mW.
The old (but currently unconnected) Beko hob boasts 5.8mW.
Both the oven installer and sparky neighbour have said we have to replace the hob and search for a "13amp" replacement, either ceramic or induction.
Spent last evening searching...these beasts are few and far between, it seems. I'm loathe to spend mega hundreds on something to replace the current hob which works (when connected!) absolutely fine!
What surprises me is that the original setup worked well for years - unfortunately the old Neff manual doesn't reveal the power situation, but has worked with 2 or 3 replacement hobs over the years without any problems.
Can anyone explain the "13amp" business to me, in Noddy language please!
Cheers....
Our 31 year old (wow!) Neff job was beginning to cause cooking problems, so we splashed out on a new Smeg number. Paid for delivery and fitting, but when it came to it, we were told that someone had bodged the wiring on the Neff and nearby 4 ring Beko ceramic hob, by cabling them together.
We had a stark choice : yes, the installer could do the same, but it would invalidate the Smeg warranty, or he could cable the hob and oven separately, but that would mean getting an electrician to add a cable back to the fuse box...not handy in our case, courtesy of a concrete floor in between. (Yes, the same concrete floor that is involved in our boiler F22 error farce! See other thread!)
He then states that the new oven is "too powerful" to connect in the same bad/old way, so leaves us with the new oven connected, but the hob not.
We have an electrician neighbour, who eventually called round to have a gander....
I don't understand about electricity, so I'll give you some numbers in an effort to get to grips with this, if I may.
We have an old bridge-type fuse box. The cooker fuse wire is rated at 30A.
The new Smeg features a sticker claiming 3mW.
The old (but currently unconnected) Beko hob boasts 5.8mW.
Both the oven installer and sparky neighbour have said we have to replace the hob and search for a "13amp" replacement, either ceramic or induction.
Spent last evening searching...these beasts are few and far between, it seems. I'm loathe to spend mega hundreds on something to replace the current hob which works (when connected!) absolutely fine!
What surprises me is that the original setup worked well for years - unfortunately the old Neff manual doesn't reveal the power situation, but has worked with 2 or 3 replacement hobs over the years without any problems.
Can anyone explain the "13amp" business to me, in Noddy language please!
Cheers....
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