Sorry for the delay in responding. Most rude of me when people take the trouble to respond to a question. Been tied up.
BruceS wrote: ↑Mon Dec 09, 2019 2:18 pm
When I renovated my garage I bought a complete unit & it was a lot cheaper than buying the bits & pieces.
Thank you Bruce. I'll check out Bunnings taking into consideration Busman & Terry's advice of whether they have a separate metal bar or not.
Care to wager they are the cheap-ass version and I end up going to Middys or similar?
"Lowest prices are just the beginning"
Nup, that's the beginning, end and middle. Cheapest at any cost. Cause we all know. Cheapest is always the best, isn't it? Rant over.
T1 Terry wrote: ↑Mon Dec 09, 2019 3:47 pmGood ones have a pressed steel DIN rail and removable, the cheaper stuff it is moulded in as part of the box.
Noted. Thank you.
..... all 2 breakers wide, so you need a box that carries double the number .... 6 x double pole units fit in a 12 pole box.
I didn't know that.
Further question please.
Two spaces for an RVD which I understand also incorporates an on/off or cutoff switch mentioned by Busman.
Two spaces for a 3way switch like
THIS ONE
Plus two spaces for one only 16A for all 240V power? or 1x 16A + 1x 10A for lights only same as household?
The very important bit, only AC wiring and stuff in the AC box and only DC stuff in the DC box. Even behind the board the 2 groups must be separated,
I'm assuming you mean only behind the DIN rail box. I will indeed have 12VDC stuff in the same cupboard but never the twain shall meet. The 240V stuff will go directly behind the switchboard and the 12V DC are all in separate conduits. They all end up in the same cupboard but different sections.
....... and PLEASE don't use household wiring for DC stuff, or speaker wire either. Never use automotive cable for the AC stuff
Hmmmm. You've reopened a dilemma for me.
1. First. ALL 240V wiring is 2.5mm2 three core stranded. Yeah ok. Light circuits theoretically should be 1.5mm2 but because all the cabling is buried behind the wall and physically impossible to get to I figured they can never be confused. Besides. that was how the original was wired by Franklin back in 1969. So, who's to say it ain't original?
2. Now the dilemma part. Originally when I ran the cabling umpteen years ago I had a surplus supply of 1.5MM2 switched active stuff laying around. 1x red and 1x white wire. Money was tight at the time so I thought bugger it, I'll use that for the 12V lights. Each run powers a single LED light. Total draw. 2/5th of a poofteenth of one amp on a very bad day.
When I then started to get back into it I cursed myself for being a cheapskate and wished I had used 6mm auto. I've convinced myself that powering a single LED it will be fine. I'll use 6mm auto to power the USB ports which will be used for recharging phones, laptop etc.
I bought myself some rolls of all the different colour wires used in that 7 core cable used to wire up the caravan plug to the car. All the same gauge as used in the cable. And I was surprised at how tiny it was. I checked the wiring on my car and its the same gauge stuff. So if that is good enough to use to wire the LED's in my taillights, stop lights etc, the 1.5mm2 should be over kill for the interior LED's.
Are you now got to tell me no?
Busman wrote: ↑Mon Dec 09, 2019 3:51 pm
What you are talking about is a small switchboard, usually a sub mains, usually with a plastic DIN rail. You can get them down to a couple of 2 pole RCD's. Plus an isolation switch of course.
As Bruce has said much cheaper when loaded with all the bits, they run specials at places like Ideal from time to time.
Thanks mate.
Cheers everyone.
Jim
There Comes a time in life, when you must walk away from all drama and the people who create it