Soldato
- Joined
- 6 Jan 2013
- Posts
- 22,272
- Location
- Rollergirl
I wasn't saying "Yes, do this - it is perfectly safe". More so offering anecdotal words.
It is my understanding, though, that the fuse is there to protect the wiring. The wiring should be rated higher than the fuse, and if there is too much current being drawn (causing the wire to overheat) then the fuse should blow first. In what I was seeing, it was the wire directly from the power meter that was getting slightly warm. Not hot. I understand and agree that they should never get warm, but if the wire was carrying enough current that this was happening then shouldn't the fuse have blown as the wire should be rated higher than the fuse.
I understand your point about daisy changing altering the characteristics. In a nutshell, are you saying that a 4-way extension lead does not mean you have 4 sockets that are rated to take 13A? I appreciate that you can't load each one at 13A, but surely given they could be used to connect a 13A load they should be rated (including the mechanical aspect, busbars) for at least one of them to draw 13A. If you tried to load two at 13A, you'd exceed the safe current carrying capacity of the wire (15A?) and the fuse would blow.
I am looking at an extension lead now, it says "13A 250V a.c BS1363/A. Total load must not exceed 13A." There is no restriction on the individual sockets.
The cable will be rated slightly higher than the outlet, so cable 15A and outlet 13A. The cable only maintains that rating and integrity if:
- It is not lenghthened (daisy chain).
- It is not damaged (insulation resistance).
- It is not overloaded (heat degradation).