yes but 6 x 13 is too much. I know this item sounds German and the Germans are very good at engineering but even they cannot create energy within an extension lead.
but how many people stop to think about total loads, thats why so many extension leads and extension leads pluged into extension leads have caused fires.
Exactly. The fuse protects the cable. Once the load exceeds the capacity of the cable to carry it the fuse blows and ensures the cable does not overheat.True, but that's why we have fuses. Just because some people do stupid things doesn't mean that the principle isn't sound.
but how many people stop to think about total loads, thats why so many extension leads and extension leads pluged into extension leads have caused fires.
You are both overlooking some fundermentals here including failure modes. A 13 amp fuse allows a continous 13 amps to flow without interuption. The fuse protects the cable under short circuit conditions, a condition that causes sufficient fault current to flow that will melt the fuse but an overload condition may eventually melt the fuse but not always before something else melts. If you look at the BS1362 characteristics for a 13 amp fuse, a 20 amp current will not blow the fuse. This is why residual current protection is so important, it protects people and in motor control systems you must have overload protection.
https://www.pat-testing-training.net/articles/fuse-operation-characteristics.php
No, if you are talking about a 13 amp socket then the designer will only have considered the fixed wiring upto that socket which will be on either a 32amp or 20 amp protective device depending on the type of circuit and wire csa used. They have no control over what the end user may use the supply for but with a 13 amp fuse fitted in the plug the cable csa must be capable of taking the prospective short circuit current in order for the fuse to melt. This is another problem in that everyone seems to fit 13 amp fuses in plugs and not always correctly sized for the cable. An example being some IT equipment I inspected some while back, the three core cables were 0.75mm yet fused with 13 amp fuses, should have been 5 amp.Sooooo - when designing a circuit that will be protected by a 13A fuse to BS1362, the designer should consider it might need to carry 20A indefinitely without melting.
No, if you are talking about a 13 amp socket then the designer will only have considered the fixed wiring upto that socket which will be on either a 32amp or 20 amp protective device depending on the type of circuit and wire csa used. They have no control over what the end user may use the supply for but with a 13 amp fuse fitted in the plug the cable csa must be capable of taking the prospective short circuit current in order for the fuse to melt. This is another problem in that everyone seems to fit 13 amp fuses in plugs and not always correctly sized for the cable. An example being some IT equipment I inspected some while back, the three core cables were 0.75mm yet fused with 13 amp fuses, should have been 5 amp.
Yes you are correct, RCD's do not protect circuits from overload, there primary function is the safety of people. A 30mA RCD has to disconnect at 30mA within a specified time and at 0 & 180° of phase. We test test them using expensive automated testers during periodic test and inspection routines but many people do not bother using the self test function at regular intervals and therefore they may actually have no protection.
I worked in a bank headquarters where entire rows of workstations were powered by extension lead plugged into extension lead, I don't know how many... I stopped worrying about extending extension leads then and there.
That said, I got an electrician to install a consumer unit in my workshop with RCD, and properly considered fuses and correctly sized cables, rather than run off extension leads. There's not worrying too much, and then there's due care.
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