Hi folks, hope all are safe in cvd-19 world.
I have a fitted kitchen with integrated units. The dishwasher and washing machines installed under counter on either side of the sink. Both units plug into a separate power sockets attached to the wood panel in the cupboard under the sink. These sockets then run off the kitchen ring via a wall socket behind the rear cupboard panel (we can't access this without removing the appliance). Each appliance has its own plug from the rear of the appliance, which we manually plug into the power socket when we want to run the units. I unplug these when not in use.
In Jan 2020 I replaced the switch on the plug socket we use for the builtin dishwasher as the power on/off switch was faulty (wouldn’t turn on). The dishwasher and its power supply had never failed for 5 years since the kitchen was renovated in 2015. The circuit never tripped.
Dishwasher is a NEFF (S5443X1GB/17), 2.3-2.5kW, 230-240V, 50Hz.
The replacement plug socket I bought was a British General (BS1363-2) 800 series 13A 1-Gang SP switched 13A plug socket.
After 3 months I now discover that the dishwasher plug socket has overheated and it stopped working (fortunately!). My wife has started plugging the dishwasher into the power socket for the washing machine (nearby) as needed. I notice that this power socket also heats up when we run the dishwasher - which doesn’t happen when we use the washing machine.
When I opened the socket I replaced in Jan, I found that both the L and N wires have melted. When I installed the socket I double checked L/N/Earth wires all made a secure connection. All wires are still well attached (but L and N melted the plastic casing around the connector).
The 13A fuse is still intact. The mains ring never tripped when the appliance runs (despite what seems like the dishwasher drawing heavy load?) I consider myself lucky that a fire didn't start!
I guess that the problem may be that I used a 800 vs 900 series plug (I see the washing machine socket is a 921 model). With Covid we are unable to get access to qualified help as my wife is at risk.
Questions:
Is there a reason the specs for the dishwasher would require a different plug socket (given it runs hot when in use)?
If I replace the socket with a 900 series will this solve the problem?
Should I use a DP vs SP plug?
Is there any other fault that may cause the wires to melt yet not blow the 13A fuse/trip the circuit?
Many thanks for any guidance
I have a fitted kitchen with integrated units. The dishwasher and washing machines installed under counter on either side of the sink. Both units plug into a separate power sockets attached to the wood panel in the cupboard under the sink. These sockets then run off the kitchen ring via a wall socket behind the rear cupboard panel (we can't access this without removing the appliance). Each appliance has its own plug from the rear of the appliance, which we manually plug into the power socket when we want to run the units. I unplug these when not in use.
In Jan 2020 I replaced the switch on the plug socket we use for the builtin dishwasher as the power on/off switch was faulty (wouldn’t turn on). The dishwasher and its power supply had never failed for 5 years since the kitchen was renovated in 2015. The circuit never tripped.
Dishwasher is a NEFF (S5443X1GB/17), 2.3-2.5kW, 230-240V, 50Hz.
The replacement plug socket I bought was a British General (BS1363-2) 800 series 13A 1-Gang SP switched 13A plug socket.
After 3 months I now discover that the dishwasher plug socket has overheated and it stopped working (fortunately!). My wife has started plugging the dishwasher into the power socket for the washing machine (nearby) as needed. I notice that this power socket also heats up when we run the dishwasher - which doesn’t happen when we use the washing machine.
When I opened the socket I replaced in Jan, I found that both the L and N wires have melted. When I installed the socket I double checked L/N/Earth wires all made a secure connection. All wires are still well attached (but L and N melted the plastic casing around the connector).
The 13A fuse is still intact. The mains ring never tripped when the appliance runs (despite what seems like the dishwasher drawing heavy load?) I consider myself lucky that a fire didn't start!
I guess that the problem may be that I used a 800 vs 900 series plug (I see the washing machine socket is a 921 model). With Covid we are unable to get access to qualified help as my wife is at risk.
Questions:
Is there a reason the specs for the dishwasher would require a different plug socket (given it runs hot when in use)?
If I replace the socket with a 900 series will this solve the problem?
Should I use a DP vs SP plug?
Is there any other fault that may cause the wires to melt yet not blow the 13A fuse/trip the circuit?
Many thanks for any guidance