Sunday Times General Knowledge (Gk) Name...
Offers & Competitions1 min ago
I recently bought a glass fusing kiln so i could work from home making jewellery.
Every time i turn the kiln on it fuses the electrics of the whole house!! In the instructions it says that if this happens it is probably due to a 30ma R.C.D being in the fuse box and it needs to be upped to a 100ma R.C.D.
My question is can i or partner do this ourselves or should i contact an electrician, both quite capable of basic diy etc?? If i could do it how would i go about it?? If had to get an electrician in what would be the cost??
Any help in this would be great as got a cool kiln going to waste in the spare room and fed up of a friend of a friend who is an electrician loosing me down.
No best answer has yet been selected by booboomojo. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Stormin is wrong ( and so are many others) to say that virtually any electrical work must be carried out by electricians.
The Part P regulations mean that electrical work must be carried out by qualified people in certain areas.
These areas are principally where it may come into contact with water, Bathrooms, kitchens outside the house etc.
So for example you may not add extra sockets to the ring in your kitchen but you can in your lounge.
There's a third option to what Buenchico says you could have an old fuse box with a seperate RCD. Unless it's a micro-rcd I'd get an electrician in this is not a standard household appliance and I'd guess draws an awful lot of (potentially dangerous) power
Not sure the above is right. Stormin - householders can do some limited electrical work on their systems - for example, putting spurs onto existing ring mains and modifying lighting rings, but not in kitchens or bathrooms. You should not be changing a 30mA RCD for a higher rated one without consulting a qualified electrician. RCDs detect for an unacceptably high leakage current between live and earth and for a domestic system that includes protecting sockets that might be used for portable equipment outside (by use of an extension lead out of the window/door) from an unacceptable risk of fatal shock. You'd be degrading this element of the system by changing the main RCD at the Consumer Unit.
It is possible that normal insulation resistance currents and stray capacitance leakage currents are driving the total leakage above 30mA and that there is not a fault in the device. It may be possible to upgrade the circuit for this device to 100mA only using a device called an RCCD (Residual Current Circuit Breaker) installed into the CU. You must consult an electrician.