

The 3m limit from the meter to the consumer unit / distribution board is per the wiring regulations and BS7671.Stinsy wrote: ↑Sat Dec 04, 2021 2:05 pmYou can achieve what you want, you just might have to do it slightly differently.Andy wrote: ↑Sat Dec 04, 2021 12:34 pmAh, I was wanting to go from the Fuse to my 'power station' and back to the CU. 20 meters each way. I was intending to use 25mm cabling. Is this allowed in that circumstance? The higher power units would be connected direct to the 'power station'I don't want all the batteries in the house and the closest place I can have a shed is about 20m from where the power enters the house. I was working on about 3 V sag which would take me to 235V.
I will be getting an electrician for all this, but doing the general planning before hand.
'power station' = batteries + solar + generator.
The tails from your meter will have to be 25mm² and will have to be terminated in a CU (Consumer Unit) within 3m. However you can go for a DB (Distribution Board) arrangement. A DB is a CU that feeds other CUs (the device is the same thing).
Here is an example: 25mm² tails from meter to DB. DB has 3 ways in use plus room for expansion: 50A MCB feeding 10mm² armoured to the "power station" CU. 50A MCB feeding 10mm² armoured to main house CU, 40A MCB feeding 6mm² armoured to EV charging point.
Obviously you have to get an electrician to do the calculations and specify the exact details based on the various criteria. Don't forget voltage "sag" works both ways! If your inverter is trying to push power into the grid, it'll have to increase the voltage, if the cable is too long and too thin the voltage will go too high and the inverter will turn off.
The extra hours from the intelligent Octopus allowed me to smash my all time daily cheap rate import record yesterday, previously being 88kWh and yesterday being 113kWh. I know import of any energy is not great thing to brag about (especially at the moment with very low wind resource). But my empty EV had to be filled, SWMBO filled her EV from the previous night so that carried on into the early hours of yesterday, but the gas boiler is still off.
If it was a competition, I'm sure I could have arranged for 18kW to be on for the whole 9.5 hr cheap slot and would be around a theoretical 170kWh.
Women, they just don't get the importance of using as little as possible...
Well the kettle did have to go on, it was just the timing. The problem I (and some of us have) is in Summer, there is generally no house heating required and tons of solar generation coming in, plus 6kW battery inverter at the ready so I say to SWMBO, don't worry, put whatever you want on, do your worst.
Thanks to both of you for your answers. It all makes sense for meJohn_S wrote: ↑Sat Dec 18, 2021 6:37 pmThe 3m limit from the meter to the consumer unit / distribution board is per the wiring regulations and BS7671.Stinsy wrote: ↑Sat Dec 04, 2021 2:05 pmYou can achieve what you want, you just might have to do it slightly differently.Andy wrote: ↑Sat Dec 04, 2021 12:34 pm
Ah, I was wanting to go from the Fuse to my 'power station' and back to the CU. 20 meters each way. I was intending to use 25mm cabling. Is this allowed in that circumstance? The higher power units would be connected direct to the 'power station'I don't want all the batteries in the house and the closest place I can have a shed is about 20m from where the power enters the house. I was working on about 3 V sag which would take me to 235V.
I will be getting an electrician for all this, but doing the general planning before hand.
'power station' = batteries + solar + generator.
The tails from your meter will have to be 25mm² and will have to be terminated in a CU (Consumer Unit) within 3m. However you can go for a DB (Distribution Board) arrangement. A DB is a CU that feeds other CUs (the device is the same thing).
Here is an example: 25mm² tails from meter to DB. DB has 3 ways in use plus room for expansion: 50A MCB feeding 10mm² armoured to the "power station" CU. 50A MCB feeding 10mm² armoured to main house CU, 40A MCB feeding 6mm² armoured to EV charging point.
Obviously you have to get an electrician to do the calculations and specify the exact details based on the various criteria. Don't forget voltage "sag" works both ways! If your inverter is trying to push power into the grid, it'll have to increase the voltage, if the cable is too long and too thin the voltage will go too high and the inverter will turn off.
This you tube video from Efixx explains the requirements in more detail and that DNOs are allowed to stipulate a maximum of less than 3m eg 2m.