I absolutely do not want to be a merchant of doom, but this set up does worry me a great deal. Ring circuits were never intended to be used to carry this sort of load for long periods, storage heater circuits were always wired as radials from a separate consumer unit, in part to mitigate the issues associated with high loads on rings (rings are a complete and utter bodge, in my view, and often present significant risks when highly loaded).Joeboy wrote: ↑Sat Dec 10, 2022 12:02 pm That's my storage heater path complete. Installed three hive plugs and a final 1.7kW unit this morning. Had a count around the house, we are as follows
6x850W upstairs
10x850W downstairs
That's 13.6kW with a 7 hour charging capacity. 95.2kWh potential storage capacity!
We are currently on a five hour charging window, falling to four hours at Hogmanay and rising to six hours when IO opens to me.
Nowty, please adjust my storage capacity when you have a moment. This has been an excellent wee journey and I'll happily have the ability to shift the charging window from Turkey at New Year.
If the house has two rings, one upstairs, one downstairs, then the absolute maximum capacity of each will be either 30A (if fused) or 32A (if protected with MCBs or RCBOs.
The actual cable used in each ring will be rated at between about 22A and 27A, depending on how it is routed (it can carry less when running inside walls and floors that it can when clipped to the outside of a wall). The cables in a ring tend to share current, although this sharing is always uneven, due to the varying lengths from the common point (at the consumer unit) to each outlet. The shorter legs from the consumer unit to an outlet will always carry more current than the longer lengths.
6 x 850W gives 5,100W, so a nominal load on the upstairs ring of 22A, with no other loads running from any other outlet.
8 x 850W gives 6,800W, so a nominal load on the downstairs ring of 29.6A, with no other loads running from any other outlet.
The downstairs ring is getting a bit marginal, TBH. I'd not want to leave the house unattended with that sort of load and would want to go around and check things, especially all the wiring terminations in the outlets and the consumer regularly, just in case.
The total load of 11.9kW leaves only a small margin for other loads, too. At the very most you may have a 15kVA single phase supply (which will be fused at 100A for short circuit protection of the cable), many homes only have a 13.8kVA supply (which will be fused at 80A, again for short circuit protection of the cable).
We are lucky enough to have the highest rated single phase supply SSE PD can provide, with a 100A fuse, so we can draw up to an absolute maximum long duration load of 15kVA. Sounds like a lot, but with 3kW charging the hot water, 7.4kW charging the car, 3kW charging the battery , around 1.5kW running the heat pump and around a 200W background load for the MVHR, water disinfection and treatment plant aeration air pump we are slightly over the limit, 15.1kW. That's without the ~45 minute overnight filter backwash every fourth night, which uses around another 600W.
My fix has been to turn the car charger down to 6kW and turn the house battery charger down to 2.5kW, just to keep the electrical installation safe. The very last thing I want is to have an electrical fire at night, when we are sound asleep, as that's when our demand is always at it's very highest.