Adsibob Posted Sunday at 15:04 Share Posted Sunday at 15:04 We have a Zanussi ZVENM7K1 combination microwave/grill/oven. It was installed 3 years ago and we’ve been using it as a microwave oven for the last 2.5 years since we moved in. The max rating for the microwave is 1000W, and we have often used it at that setting. Last night we used it in oven mode, perhaps for the first time ever (I’m not sure) and it tripped the fuse. Trying to turn it back on we get a fault FH24 and then FO17 before it trips the fuse again. Given the oven is rated at 3kw, if it is actually the case that we’ve never used it as an oven, is it possible the electrician who installed it only provided a fuse for a 1kw Microwave. I notice that both the nearby isolator switch and the fuse on the mains consumer unit are labelled “microwave” so maybe he thought it was just a microwave and not an oven as well. If it is an installation error, is it straightforward to upgrade the fuses in the CU and in the isolator switch, or is the limiting factor going to be the type of cable used between the CU and the oven (which I estimate is about 12m to 15m long)? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ProDave Posted Sunday at 15:22 Share Posted Sunday at 15:22 Have you looked up what those error codes mean? Is it an MCB or RCD that trips? and does it only trip when the oven actually turns on? Have you tried other oven modes, e.g fan oven, conventional oven, grill? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MikeGrahamT21 Posted Sunday at 15:24 Share Posted Sunday at 15:24 What is the current rating of the MCB in the fuse board for that circuit? Youd need a 16A MCB for the 3kW device minimum but it all depends on cable thickness as to whether it will take it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Adsibob Posted Sunday at 15:46 Author Share Posted Sunday at 15:46 21 minutes ago, ProDave said: Have you looked up what those error codes mean? When I look them up, all I find is “for this error you need to call an engineer”, not very helpful. 21 minutes ago, ProDave said: Is it an MCB or RCD that trips? What’s the difference and how do I tell? 21 minutes ago, ProDave said: and does it only trip when the oven actually turns on? Have you tried other oven modes, e.g fan oven, conventional oven, it just trips when switched on - ie at the intermediate stage before actually selecting a mode. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SteamyTea Posted Sunday at 17:17 Share Posted Sunday at 17:17 1 hour ago, Adsibob said: “for this error you need to call an engineer”, I would have thought a technician would be good enough. 1 hour ago, Adsibob said: 1 hour ago, ProDave said: Is it an MCB or RCD that trips? What’s the difference and how do I tell A MCB is a modern fuse, a RCD is a safety device to stop electucution. Sometimes they are combined. Take a picture and post it up, someone is bound to know. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Adsibob Posted Sunday at 20:12 Author Share Posted Sunday at 20:12 2 hours ago, SteamyTea said: I would have thought a technician would be good enough. A MCB is a modern fuse, a RCD is a safety device to stop electucution. Sometimes they are combined. Take a picture and post it up, someone is bound to know. Here are two photos, one showing the whole CU and the other a close up. I’m concerned given the labelling that the sparky has wired it for a microwave and not for a combination oven: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Adsibob Posted Sunday at 20:17 Author Share Posted Sunday at 20:17 This close up is in sharper focus k in case any of those font size 8 characters mean anything: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ProDave Posted Sunday at 20:17 Share Posted Sunday at 20:17 That's an rcbo so there is no way to find out if it is tripping due to over current or earth leakage. It's 16A it would have to be a very big oven for that not to be enough, Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Adsibob Posted Sunday at 20:28 Author Share Posted Sunday at 20:28 10 minutes ago, ProDave said: It's 16A it would have to be a very big oven for that not to be enough, Thanks @ProDave so is that sufficient to serve an oven that has a “total electricity loading” of 3000W? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ProDave Posted Sunday at 20:43 Share Posted Sunday at 20:43 14 minutes ago, Adsibob said: Thanks @ProDave so is that sufficient to serve an oven that has a “total electricity loading” of 3000W? Yes the fault is with the oven. Persevere searching for the meaning of those fault codes. Is it still under any form of guarantee? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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