DNO fuse is to protect the installation as a whole metering etc, the additional fuse is required to protect the cabling to the CU. Not required if CU is closer.
DNO will only fit 80a fuse in cutout. Your 100a fuse pointless. Really needs to be 63a to allow for discrimination between household circuit and DNO supply.
I'm DNO and can confirm we have recently had instruction to fit an 80 amp in the 100 amp cutout. The reason being it will allow 120 amp + for a few hours. The time/current curve for the BS88 will confirm this. As for discrimination, you don't need to bother. It's 50/50 which one will fail first and if it's the DNO one that gives up first, they will respond within 2 hours anyway. In some instances ( flats with submains ) we use a red fuse link in the flat as there's already fuse protection in the Distribution board ( eg Bemco/Rapell/Schnieder boards ).
@@robtmcL12 "50/50 which one will fail first" - which sort of begs the question why these second fuses are fitted in the first place? Seems like its just some box ticking exercise.
Nice. FYI, its the meter operator (eon, british gas etc) who will install the meter. DNO own up to the cutout before the meter, so will not install that
I've done a couple of these, it's easier to curl the wires at both lod and supply side. I always leave length on cables just in case and it looks just as tidy. Not sure why earth nut or banjo wasn installed from source side as less likely to get tampered or disconnected 🤔
Tampering with Earth or Neutral won't in any way get you free electricity, it will just make the life more dangerous. So putting them on "consumer side" is actually preferred, since then if the consumer or any electrician needs to make a measurement on for example earth or neutral, you usually need to separate these (NOTE: Very dangerous, should be done with isolated supply) and then you can measure, for example, track down cheater earths (cheater earths are when you make a fake earth out of the neutral on a socket - super dangerous!) - this by connecting a beeper transmitter on the now disconnected earth, and then making sure every socket beeps. If a socket doesn't beep, its a sign that the earth in that socket is fake. Disconnected neutrals and earths also have other usages, measuring resistance to find out cable lengths and impedance, tracing broken earths and neutrals and lots of other uses, and it would be a pity to have to call DNO or meter company just to do some troubleshooting on earth or neutral. So always leave earth and neutral easily accessible on consumer side.
great vid. Ive got to do one this week. what's the general thoughts on running the swa up the cavity?? If i cant get it up the cavity then I'm going to have to chase it into the block behind the dot and dab :/
22/58 100a fuse is an European style industrial fuse NOT a domestic 22/57 house service type. Any short circuit fault would blow the DNO fuse and not the one in the switch fuse,I've seen this happen before,these fuses have a much higher watts loss and pre arcing values are higher
@@temp06j723-pmeighttq Because my understanding is that the cable size and fuse should match the setup. The DNO fuse is 100 amps. The tails are 25mm which support amps of over that size of use or thereabouts. If you then are going to build a distribution network then the DNO then expects you to go lower in cable size and fuse to protect their fuse. A 25mm cable matches the tails which isn’t the correct way to build a distribution network hence the question. I think the distribution network needs to be lower cable and fuse so that if there was an issue on it then it would protect the DNOs fuse and setup but I’m not qualified and learning so if you know the answer I’d be glad to hear it.
DNO's cabling protection is another complex story. CutOut is to protect Meter Tails etc. When given a 100A service Cut Out, you wouldn't be fitting a 16mm² Tails unless you Downsize the Switch-fused Isolator + fuse to a 80A then it will be fine. But then it will be a waste, considering the ability the DNO to Service up to 100A yet we downgrade our PERMANENT Cabling(meter tails) to a lower size that Forever is Binded/capped to 80A in the future (with using of 16mm²). Hope it makes sense.
The city had my service cut out replaced a week ago, and then yesterday it literally caught fire. Was arcing and there were flames and burning and very loud thuds that spat fire into my bedroom, smoke everywhere, fire alarms blaring.... They came in and made a temporary replacement connection to my neighbors power. Now I'm just freaked out about it, what if it does it again, what if it does it while I'm asleep, or worse yet, what if it does it while I'm at work and I come back to a smoldering ruin of a house. Went from never thinking about electricity to just being paranoid over it being in my damn house....
@@Dooguk I had one of those "semi yearly inspections" and the electrition, after checking all the fuses and outlets and all the circuit breakers told me that the reading on it is 1.22, when legally it can be 0.80 max, hence the replacement. I know now that what happened is, I had one of those old paper insulated wires going into the cutout, and when the electricians were replacing the box they bothered the wire and the old paper insulation enough for it to short and ark and cause that fire. And best thing is, the electricians who finalized the job actually didn't connect the live wire from cutout into meter, they just sort of shoved it in there and it was slowly slipping out every time a car went by outside the house, had to call them again and watched as the new guy touched the wire and it came out of the box with minimal effort. He could not explain to me why they wouldn't secure the live wire properly.
@@ArtypNk It sounds to me like they never tightened the screw(s) in the meter. There should have been two guys for the first call, is that correct? They should have replaced the cables with double insulated ones when they fitted the new cutout anyway. I'm sure The guy who put it right would have made sure everything was ok before he left.
@@Dooguk There were 2 guys on the first call, and then 2 guys were temporary fixing it with the "wire through the window", plus the 4 guys who dug the ground/cut the wire. Then 4 more when they did the proper fix, and out of those four not one decided to tighten the live wire into the meter screw. The final guy was just him, but then all he had to do is remove the fuse, screw in the wire, and put the fuse back in. Looking back at it, yea, it should have been looked at by the first 2 guys and they should have said "This wire is not safe, needs to be replaced".
@@ArtypNk Quite right, the first two should have. I asked if it was two guys because you can't work on live cables on your own for obvious safety reason. The guy on his own who worked on the meter can pull a fuse out to make thing safe. It all sounds like a right comedy of errors though.
@@_eusty there are regs for it, if you look in the regs book where it lists the colours, now black should never be used as as a neutral with new colours
So the powers that be can gain access to it without you needing to be home. They cant enter your home by law unless you let them in. If you build a metal cage around your outdoor meter then they cant gain access and if they break it to get to the meter its classed as criminal damage.
+1 i really don't get this .. seems every UK elektrician buys the SWA for industrial 3 phase use with black/brown/grey . And changes the colors . Here in Belgium this is not really allowed as it is confusing . Using a black conductor for PE etc .. just buy the correct cable for domestic .. and it seemes UK is 99% single fase in houses .. should be no problem to find correct cable .( in Belgium we call this 3G16 / 3G25 . The G tells there is a ground wire( CPC yellow green in ) and 2 wires for current blue and brown(or black ) .
@@_eusty yep for 3x400V industrial use the colors are correct .. and NO neutral wire . And CPC is run seperate .. So domestic elektricians just buy the wrong cable and relabel it .. Would not pass inspection here official . the color has to be the same for whole cable ( so recoloring black to green/yellow is not ok here ) . But i think in UK after installation no external company needs to inspect the electricians work and aprove .. i have seen many do it on youube .. so i guess it's allowed in UK ..
hi, anybody could explain when we could place 63amp, or 80amp or 100amp? after installed smart meter it increased the bill cost, burn off extractor, washing machine, hair drier, thank you have a nice day
I installed one for a meter move, wrestled with the 25mm 3core only for the DNO to put in cable that was no bigger than my thumb! What’s that all about?!
@@RDavisElectrical Yes i am serious. Maybe you require more experience. Different area’s i suppose have different rules. In Cambridgeshire we had to use a separate meter box for sw fuse. We were not allowed to fit anything in with the head & meter.
Also i hope the extra one is faster then the one from the DNO 🙂 Seems a bit useless 2 100A melt fuses after eachother .. if the new one trips first your lucky .. you can replace it . If the DNO ones trips you have to call DNO or break the seal . ( kinda funny in uk they do'nt have automatic fuses from the DNO .. proably because melt fuses are cheaper )
Nice one Ryan that is always a bitch of a job. Even if you do armours every day.its still shit. You made it look easy keep up the good work. The only thing I do different is I take the grommet out of the gland and put it back in, so the 2 25 mm holes are at the back.
Bin the banjo, Use Earth Nuts - It is 2022!! 🙂 Also you have left that WRONG, the Isolator should kill the fuse, not a slick mod! Probably a job for CW, NOT a BW Gland as well....
DNO fuse is to protect the installation as a whole metering etc, the additional fuse is required to protect the cabling to the CU. Not required if CU is closer.
Wouldn’t a heavy duty MCB be a better component? Fits in a smaller box, doubles up the switch and protection functions, etc.
😅
Leaving extra length of the armoured would make the job easier i believe .. Well done sparky 👍
Why was it not an 80amp fuse upstream of the 100amp main cutout? Descrimination/ Selectivity and what not
+1 .. now it's the strongest fuse who will not pop :p 50/50 chance the DNO one will trip :p
Assuming the DNO puts a 100a in... your fuse needs to be max 80a. Selectivity and all that 👍
No, you don`t... because there is no need for selectivity there.
@@Emin3m1986 who says?
DNO will only fit 80a fuse in cutout. Your 100a fuse pointless. Really needs to be 63a to allow for discrimination between household circuit and DNO supply.
I'm DNO and can confirm we have recently had instruction to fit an 80 amp in the 100 amp cutout. The reason being it will allow 120 amp + for a few hours. The time/current curve for the BS88 will confirm this.
As for discrimination, you don't need to bother. It's 50/50 which one will fail first and if it's the DNO one that gives up first, they will respond within 2 hours anyway. In some instances ( flats with submains ) we use a red fuse link in the flat as there's already fuse protection in the Distribution board ( eg Bemco/Rapell/Schnieder boards ).
@@robtmcL12 "50/50 which one will fail first" - which sort of begs the question why these second fuses are fitted in the first place? Seems like its just some box ticking exercise.
Nice. FYI, its the meter operator (eon, british gas etc) who will install the meter. DNO own up to the cutout before the meter, so will not install that
Yep.
Great help thankyou so much Ryan youre the best
I've done a couple of these, it's easier to curl the wires at both lod and supply side. I always leave length on cables just in case and it looks just as tidy. Not sure why earth nut or banjo wasn installed from source side as less likely to get tampered or disconnected 🤔
Tampering with Earth or Neutral won't in any way get you free electricity, it will just make the life more dangerous. So putting them on "consumer side" is actually preferred, since then if the consumer or any electrician needs to make a measurement on for example earth or neutral, you usually need to separate these (NOTE: Very dangerous, should be done with isolated supply) and then you can measure, for example, track down cheater earths (cheater earths are when you make a fake earth out of the neutral on a socket - super dangerous!) - this by connecting a beeper transmitter on the now disconnected earth, and then making sure every socket beeps. If a socket doesn't beep, its a sign that the earth in that socket is fake.
Disconnected neutrals and earths also have other usages, measuring resistance to find out cable lengths and impedance, tracing broken earths and neutrals and lots of other uses, and it would be a pity to have to call DNO or meter company just to do some troubleshooting on earth or neutral.
So always leave earth and neutral easily accessible on consumer side.
great vid. Ive got to do one this week. what's the general thoughts on running the swa up the cavity?? If i cant get it up the cavity then I'm going to have to chase it into the block behind the dot and dab :/
So is it purely because of the distance then?
I think a saw another video about the same thing earlier today
The supply companies use to insist that no consumer apparatus be installed in meter cabinets, has that changed ?
This is technically not true in this case when a consumer unit is more than 3 m away from the main head there has to be an isolator of some kind
@@kobirelf97 yes and it is fitted the by the meter company (same time as meter), source= my job
Great job,quick question, what’s the point of using a 100A isolator when the mains got a 100A alright supporting it?
If the tails are longer than 3 metres away from the consumer unit you have to put in a fused mains switch due to regs
Thanks man very helpful i will definitely do the same ❤❤❤
What grips did you use please
How many mm2 of cable is that please
22/58 100a fuse is an European style industrial fuse NOT a domestic 22/57 house service type. Any short circuit fault would blow the DNO fuse and not the one in the switch fuse,I've seen this happen before,these fuses have a much higher watts loss and pre arcing values are higher
Curious if its recommended putting some kind of terminal on the bare conductor? or if this does not matter, cheers!
i.e. crimp or other
Why 25mm SWA and not 16mm?
Why not 25mm² ?
Why not 35mm² ??
@@temp06j723-pmeighttq Because my understanding is that the cable size and fuse should match the setup. The DNO fuse is 100 amps. The tails are 25mm which support amps of over that size of use or thereabouts. If you then are going to build a distribution network then the DNO then expects you to go lower in cable size and fuse to protect their fuse. A 25mm cable matches the tails which isn’t the correct way to build a distribution network hence the question. I think the distribution network needs to be lower cable and fuse so that if there was an issue on it then it would protect the DNOs fuse and setup but I’m not qualified and learning so if you know the answer I’d be glad to hear it.
DNO's cabling protection is another complex story.
CutOut is to protect Meter Tails etc.
When given a 100A service Cut Out, you wouldn't be fitting a 16mm² Tails unless you Downsize the Switch-fused Isolator + fuse to a 80A then it will be fine.
But then it will be a waste, considering the ability the DNO to Service up to 100A yet we downgrade our PERMANENT Cabling(meter tails) to a lower size that Forever is Binded/capped to 80A in the future (with using of 16mm²).
Hope it makes sense.
Did you run the swa through the cavity if so how much of it?
Didn’t he say the consumer unit was roughly 12mtr away?
Nice clean job
Brilliant ❤❤
Any reason why you didn’t use a stuffer instead of a swa gland as it’s earth distro end ?
Nah no reason mate
I've used these once, personally I prefer the metal swa glands feels better even if
it's just my excuse to get grips out and show off 😂
Because it would be shit?
Is it possible for the switch to go off but not blow fuse?
The city had my service cut out replaced a week ago, and then yesterday it literally caught fire. Was arcing and there were flames and burning and very loud thuds that spat fire into my bedroom, smoke everywhere, fire alarms blaring.... They came in and made a temporary replacement connection to my neighbors power. Now I'm just freaked out about it, what if it does it again, what if it does it while I'm asleep, or worse yet, what if it does it while I'm at work and I come back to a smoldering ruin of a house.
Went from never thinking about electricity to just being paranoid over it being in my damn house....
Why was the first cut out replaced?
@@Dooguk
I had one of those "semi yearly inspections" and the electrition, after checking all the fuses and outlets and all the circuit breakers told me that the reading on it is 1.22, when legally it can be 0.80 max, hence the replacement.
I know now that what happened is, I had one of those old paper insulated wires going into the cutout, and when the electricians were replacing the box they bothered the wire and the old paper insulation enough for it to short and ark and cause that fire. And best thing is, the electricians who finalized the job actually didn't connect the live wire from cutout into meter, they just sort of shoved it in there and it was slowly slipping out every time a car went by outside the house, had to call them again and watched as the new guy touched the wire and it came out of the box with minimal effort. He could not explain to me why they wouldn't secure the live wire properly.
@@ArtypNk It sounds to me like they never tightened the screw(s) in the meter. There should have been two guys for the first call, is that correct? They should have replaced the cables with double insulated ones when they fitted the new cutout anyway. I'm sure The guy who put it right would have made sure everything was ok before he left.
@@Dooguk
There were 2 guys on the first call, and then 2 guys were temporary fixing it with the "wire through the window", plus the 4 guys who dug the ground/cut the wire.
Then 4 more when they did the proper fix, and out of those four not one decided to tighten the live wire into the meter screw.
The final guy was just him, but then all he had to do is remove the fuse, screw in the wire, and put the fuse back in.
Looking back at it, yea, it should have been looked at by the first 2 guys and they should have said "This wire is not safe, needs to be replaced".
@@ArtypNk Quite right, the first two should have. I asked if it was two guys because you can't work on live cables on your own for obvious safety reason. The guy on his own who worked on the meter can pull a fuse out to make thing safe. It all sounds like a right comedy of errors though.
Do you not usually use the grey for the earth and black for neutral or doesn’t it matter as long as it’s sleeved?
No mate, black for CPC always 👍🏻
Deneutralization of black means it will always be CPC and grey will be the neutral mate
Denuetralize the black always grey is neutral and should be sleeved blue.
I do the same, but really there are no regs, as long as they are identified correctly.
@@_eusty there are regs for it, if you look in the regs book where it lists the colours, now black should never be used as as a neutral with new colours
Why are Meters now fitted on the outside of the house?
So the powers that be can gain access to it without you needing to be home.
They cant enter your home by law unless you let them in.
If you build a metal cage around your outdoor meter then they cant gain access and if they break it to get to the meter its classed as criminal damage.
Pay slightly more and you can have colour coded SWA ….BROWN..BLUE …GREEN/YELLOW ..worth the extra .
It’s really no time at all to put the heat shrink on, plus the heat gun kept my hands warm 😂
+1 i really don't get this .. seems every UK elektrician buys the SWA for industrial 3 phase use with black/brown/grey . And changes the colors . Here in Belgium this is not really allowed as it is confusing .
Using a black conductor for PE etc .. just buy the correct cable for domestic .. and it seemes UK is 99% single fase in houses .. should be no problem to find correct cable .( in Belgium we call this 3G16 / 3G25 . The G tells there is a ground wire( CPC yellow green in ) and 2 wires for current blue and brown(or black ) .
@@kittsdiy That's because 3 core SWA is generally used on 3 phase systems....
@@_eusty yep for 3x400V industrial use the colors are correct .. and NO neutral wire . And CPC is run seperate .. So domestic elektricians just buy the wrong cable and relabel it .. Would not pass inspection here official . the color has to be the same for whole cable ( so recoloring black to green/yellow is not ok here ) . But i think in UK after installation no external company needs to inspect the electricians work and aprove .. i have seen many do it on youube .. so i guess it's allowed in UK ..
Hence the sleeving….
If the sleeving is blue or green or brown, then that states what the conductor is. 👍🏻
That neutral on the load side must of been a right pig
Yep, it was 👍🏻😂
Those switch fuses are pants, just no room in there. I always buy the Wylex ones ,plenty of room in them.
Wish I’d seen this comment before, fitted a niglon yesterday, fuck all space in there.
hi, anybody could explain when we could place 63amp, or 80amp or 100amp? after installed smart meter it increased the bill cost, burn off extractor, washing machine, hair drier, thank you have a nice day
I installed one for a meter move, wrestled with the 25mm 3core only for the DNO to put in cable that was no bigger than my thumb! What’s that all about?!
😂😂ffs
Possibly try rated?
Would’ve been Concentric cable mate if TNCS
Mate, I`m curious how did you manage to put back the front of the Fused Switch Panel... I guess that you know what I mean.
The packaging is provided with extra stickers
The meter box isn’t your’s so how do you get away with using it for your sw fuse. I’ve always had to put it either inside property of 2nd box.
You can’t be serious?
@@RDavisElectrical Yes i am serious. Maybe you require more experience. Different area’s i suppose have different rules. In Cambridgeshire we had to use a separate meter box for sw fuse. We were not allowed to fit anything in with the head & meter.
The meter box is property of the homeowner.
@@persona250 The box is but not what goes in it.
@@stevenredmond7455 Nah steve sw fuse can go in meter box!
Great work mate… the guy from the DNO will appreciate the work too. Not understanding the ball ache you had leaving plenty of room for the meter 👍
Cheers mate. He better appreciate it 😂😂
The meter provider won’t touch it. They don’t connect to a de-energised supply and on the basis there’s no room for an isolator, they’d walk away.
Should you be fitting a 100a switch fuse?
that would probably trip faster then DNO (melt) fuse. I would go for this approach i think.
Just curious as to what is the need for another fuse next to the main fuse?
We aren’t allowed to touch the main fuse 😅
Without ringing the DNO anyway
Also i hope the extra one is faster then the one from the DNO 🙂
Seems a bit useless 2 100A melt fuses after eachother .. if the new one trips first your lucky .. you can replace it .
If the DNO ones trips you have to call DNO or break the seal . ( kinda funny in uk they do'nt have automatic fuses from the DNO .. proably because melt fuses are cheaper )
@@kittsdiy I thought that....
It’s because the cable is over the recommended distance. And runs in the fabric of the building.
Whats the limit on how long the cable run can be in this situation?
No limit really. But you have to size cable correctly for voltage drop. (And i do not mean limitless as in 1 million miles... )
how come the cables dont come with the right colour? Brown, Blue, Earth
Because the cable used was 3 phase + armoured (earth). Not sure why you wouldn't use 2 core, plus armoured.
@@StuartJ Having Earth as a wire in the cable from meter to the unit is more reliable than relying on the armour
@@Dexedus I don't see how. So long as the armour is correctly terminated.
@@StuartJ the armour is not of sufficient size in this scenario .
I would have put the tails gland above the main switch they would have gone straight in ..
And fit an earthing nut on the swa gland .
Don’t suppose you had to move the new enclosure about 3mm to the left to get the cover on did you 👀🤣
Nope, went on, just 😬😅😂
@@RDavisElectrical the squeaky bum when you remember the cover over laps 😂
@@GRANTY960and the bonding strap for the front cover isn't fitted
Is there room for a smart meter🤔
Plenty
Nice one Ryan that is always a bitch of a job. Even if you do armours every day.its still shit. You made it look easy keep up the good work. The only thing I do different is I take the grommet out of the gland and put it back in, so the 2 25 mm holes are at the back.
Cheers Andrew, appreciate it, yeah it’s a git of a job.
You won't be getting a smart meter in there, the meter fitter can't check for tightness on your tail going from iso into the meter
Bet getting the cover on was a nightmare😂
Pretty sure the each connection for the lid is on the right hand side too
Surely you have now cut the available power to the house by 20%.
Bin the banjo, Use Earth Nuts - It is 2022!! 🙂
Also you have left that WRONG, the Isolator should kill the fuse, not a slick mod!
Probably a job for CW, NOT a BW Gland as well....
yeah have to say this wasn't a great job on this video
very helpful video....
Top stuff
👍👍👍👍👍
Fuse switch
Looks like agg bro😂
It really was 😩😂😂
😁✋✋
Хм, запасика у нуля нету
What grips did you use please
Knipex pliers wrench