I’m looking for somewhere between 200 and 500m of 4mm2 in the usual 5 colours to wire up the workshop. Where’s the best place to buy it from these days and what sort of price should I be expecting? (I’m going to wire the earth in 4mm2 too)
Not if using it for three phase and neutral with a CPC . 4mm at 500 metres is a 1Km loop ! Must be looking at around a 10mV drop per amp per metre .However, why 5 colours, can you not just use 3
Please explain. Three phase sockets, isolators etc run from the main board as individual radials from there own protective three phase device the same as 16 amp socket, isolators etc that run from there own single phase protective device and single phase sockets that accept fused plugs can run as a radial looped in and out so a string on a given protective device that would be 32 amps if run in 4mm. Here you need to do some thinking as you can run these in 2.5mm cable and use a 20 amp protective device bearing in mind that you will probably have several radials to different areas.When wiring up, I anticipate that any socket could be single or 3 phase 32A
Done correctly there are no issues, but good practice does state no joints within the trunking so you would need to use an enclosure so the cables exit and re enter the trunking with decent connectors.and taking the decision in most cases to put new drops in rather than jointing cables
But remember the CPC in a 2.5 mm T&E is only 1.5mm and if running trunking then sticking T&E in there will look like a short cut, 2.5 singles are not that expensive and again will offer more flexability in the future. Also something to note is that you should keep all your 13 amp sockets fed from the same phase within the workshop.probably twin and earth as it’s cheaper than singles
Ring mains are historic, search the forums as it has been discussed. Use radials for your 13 amp sockets and that means that once you reach the last socket there is no cable run back to the board. If using 4mm cable and a 32 amp circuit getting two 4mm cables into the face plate can be tight, in these cases using small enclosures and Wago connectors is the solution. Do the calcs on loading and run your 13 amp sockets from several radials, that way you will not have a 70 metre run and maybe use one for say half the workshop and another for the other half so then you might find you can use 2.5mm singles and a 20 amp protective device.The ring main for 13A sockets will probably be run in 2.5mm
Interesting, I'd forgotten the UK undersizes its earths in a TPE- here in Australia, all three conductors in a TPE are the same size- so a 2.5mm TPE has all three are 2.5mm^2 in size... (it's been a while since I dealt with UK stuff lol)But remember the CPC in a 2.5 mm T&E is only 1.5mm and if running trunking then sticking T&E in there will look like a short cut
I did this in my much smaller shop and consider it a good solution. I had no issues getting a couple of 4mm singles into the terminals of any metalclad faceplate.@Spectric I know rings are ‘old fashioned’, but they do provide IMO redundancy for a single CPC fault. I kind of favour running a radial rated cable but making it into a ring. Sounds daft I know, but it means should the CPC connection fail anywhere I have a back up circuit.
Why and what makes it elegant ? You are running a cable from the board round the workshop and back to the board when you can just run from board to the last socket with no return.but for this application it is actually an elegant and robust solution.
Yes that has caused issues with some installations using long cable runs when it comes to final testing and type C protective devices when you find the loop impedance is either marginal or to high.Interesting, I'd forgotten the UK undersizes its earths in a TPE
Think about that statement and add "under a fault condition" ! You have a 32 amp protective device but would only have a 1.5 mm CPC that potentially would need to handle 160 amps and that is enough to make it act like a fuse wire. On the other hand if one of the lines went open then you have a 2.5mm cable protected by a 32 amp device . Yes I really dislike rings, testing them can be a nightmare and for some reason people like adding things and modifying them which can then be another problem for someone else.but they do provide IMO redundancy for a single CPC fault.
And the same on 4mm T&E of course.But remember the CPC in a 2.5 mm T&E is only 1.5mm
Subject to doing the maths on voltage drop etc:Why and what makes it elegant ? You are running a cable from the board round the workshop and back to the board when you can just run from board to the last socket with no return.
Its not until you get up into the truly huge sizes that you see the 'undersized earth cable' start to appear with some brands (which are best avoided imho)- the 10mm^2 TPE has a 4mm^2 earth, and the 16mm^2 TPE has a 6mm^2 earth conductorAnd the same on 4mm T&E of course.
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