Just need a bit of advice.
I have a spare socket on my main consumer unit.
It is rated at 40amp
I would like to connect up some electrics to my shed.
I have seen a small consumer unit (2 way with 6amp and 16amp)
Is this ok to run of the 40amp in the consumer unit in my house?
Lastly do I use the 6amp for lighting and the 16amp for main sockets?
I know how to wire things up but wanted to make sure I have things right.
Hi to answer your questions in order
1, Shed is approx. 20 metres from CU
2, Through the roof, down the side in pipe attached to side of house, buried underground in pipe the up into shed.
3, load would be florescent light plus a double socket for tools and that's it
4, supply 240v
5, Current CU has 2 spare mcb slots. Already checked previously with electrician about electrics to shed and won't be overloaded.
6??
7??
For just a fluorescent light and a double socket installing a "shed 6A/16A CU" sounds like overkill to me!!
If you did use your shed CU option you would have potentially 6A+16A load at the shed.. (22A)
In reality I would guess it will be less than 20A load !!
So if you are only going to be drawing less than 20A...
Why go to all the expense of fitting cable capable of 40A and using the 40A MCB at the house...
Thats two lots of unnecessary expense in my book..?
The cable MUST be big enough to carry any potential fault current before the MCB trips...
Otherwise the cable will melt first!!
Or to put it another way you are doing your "design" back to front...
You do not design a circuit base on what protective devices you have at the CU..
You ***** your new load requirements first....
Then consider cable size large enough to carry the load and satisfy volt drop limitations..
and protective device suitable to protect the cable and supply the load without any nuisance tripping etc..
I would bet that a 20A radial supply from the house to however many sockets you are fitting..
and a 3A FCU to connect the lights onto would be far cheaper......
And still give you the power you need...?
But then that is the joy of watching DIY'ers make a cheap problem expensive...
thinking they have done a good job!!
Why not ask your "electrician" that you mentioned in point 5 do give you a proper job design, install, test certify...
And not forgetting notify for Part-P compliance the new circuit you are installing!!
opcorn