I was considering ordering from Argos...their delivery, installation and recycling is about £80. Intially I thought that was a lot, but doesnt seem too bad now.
Not long ago I had a new electric cooker connected and, apart from connecting the cooker,new regulations required a separate fuse box, not so quite a simple job.Also if an electrical job is done by someone other than a qualified electrician the job must be inspected by the said qualified electrician. A NAPIT Certificate is required.
>>> Also if an electrical job is done by someone other than a qualified electrician the job must be inspected by the said qualified electrician
Only if a new circuit is required. It's perfectly legal to change a socket, ceiling rose or light switch on your own, as it is to wire in a cooker to an existing circuit (or, more accurately, spur).
I agree, Danny, but the question isn't about 'wiring' a cooker but 'connecting' one.
I'm assuming (and I'll bet that Argos are, given the price they've quoted) that the fuse box and its associated wiring are already in place, meaning that the cooker simply needs to be connected to the existing power point on the kitchen wall.
All ok if that is ,I am just going by what my electrician(by the way not the one who carried out the work) that these new regs required a separate fuse box which would be subject to a ten yearly examination.
I have an electric cooker by default as there is no gas supply to my flat. I don't like it; it is so much easier to cook things on a gas hob rather than an electric one, I feel so much more in control.
If your kitchen already has a 'cooker point' which most do, it is just as easy as connecting a plug. Just connect the 3 wires to the cooker point just as you connect a plug.
A cooker point is already connected to the fuse box
( now called a consumer unit) so you don't need to worry about that part.