MikeSharp01 Posted December 3 Share Posted December 3 I think I get that Induction hobs are not pure resistive loads like the old hobs were and they are earth leaky so is a B curve 40A AFDD+RCBO (30mA) going to be OK for a 7.5kW induction hob or is another curve more appropriate and once I decide on that what brand should I choose - I am looking at WYLEX (Which I think is Siemens) but there are many others I could choose in the WYLEX segment if you get my drift. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Onoff Posted December 3 Share Posted December 3 I recently went with Fusebox and tbh am impressed. My induction hob is on a B curve, 32A RCBO and it's fine. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nod Posted December 4 Share Posted December 4 8 hours ago, Onoff said: I recently went with Fusebox and tbh am impressed. My induction hob is on a B curve, 32A RCBO and it's fine. Plus 1? Our Electrian works for a multinational company that only uses Fusebox Half the price of our previous Box Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SteamyTea Posted December 4 Share Posted December 4 I have an induction hob, consumer unit still uses fuse wire. Never had a problem. I do seem to remember that there was something in the box about what type of breaker to use. Just had a quick look at a similar model and all it says is: "A circuit breaker with a contact opening of at least 3 mm, rated 32A and delayed functioning type must be installed inside the supply circuit." So no help at all. Why has the price gone up by 200 quid in 3 years, I only paid £140 for mine, now £350. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mike Posted December 5 Share Posted December 5 Not an electrician, but when looking into why Type C seems to be used universally in France, a Type C requires a lower earth loop impedance than Type B to trip within an acceptable time. That doesn't seem to be a problem in France (where the independent electrical inspectorate check earth loop impedance for every new installation), but apparently that's not necessarily the case in the UK. TLDR - safer to choose Type B. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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