anthrobson
New member
Hi folks, I suspect the answer to this might be 'get a proper electrician', but thought I'd check first...
For some unknown reason the people who owned our house before us removed the extractor hood above the cooked, leaving a big hole. The ducting and everything is still there, and there's a two-gang three-pin basic socket. I blthely assumed I could buy an extractor that would fit the hole, stick a plug on the cable, and hey presto. But the instructions have got me confused.
They're a bit all over the place. References are made to plugs, but then on the next page there a strict 'this MUST be connected directly to the mains', and after a wiring diagram for Europe, for the UK says it should be connected to a Double Pole Switched Spur Outlet. It also says it MUST be earthed, and that it is supplied with a three core main cable.
The thing is... It isn't. The cable is two-core, and the metal casing has an earth symbol stamped at one point, so I assume grounds to the casing.
I've actually got a spur outlet (and 3A fuse to replace the 13A fuse it came with - again, the instructions say 3A), and was wondering if I can just replace the three-pin socket (it appears to be a spur) with this; or could I even just put the 3A plug onto the appliance and plug it into the socket (it works)?
Thanks!
Anthony
For some unknown reason the people who owned our house before us removed the extractor hood above the cooked, leaving a big hole. The ducting and everything is still there, and there's a two-gang three-pin basic socket. I blthely assumed I could buy an extractor that would fit the hole, stick a plug on the cable, and hey presto. But the instructions have got me confused.
They're a bit all over the place. References are made to plugs, but then on the next page there a strict 'this MUST be connected directly to the mains', and after a wiring diagram for Europe, for the UK says it should be connected to a Double Pole Switched Spur Outlet. It also says it MUST be earthed, and that it is supplied with a three core main cable.
The thing is... It isn't. The cable is two-core, and the metal casing has an earth symbol stamped at one point, so I assume grounds to the casing.
I've actually got a spur outlet (and 3A fuse to replace the 13A fuse it came with - again, the instructions say 3A), and was wondering if I can just replace the three-pin socket (it appears to be a spur) with this; or could I even just put the 3A plug onto the appliance and plug it into the socket (it works)?
Thanks!
Anthony