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| weasley |
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 weasley World Chat Champion

Joined: 16 Oct 2010 Karma :    
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 Posted: 12:23 - 23 Dec 2014 Post subject: Power to the shed |
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In a couple of weeks we get our garden project underway. It involves a lot of earthworks, a patio, driveway etc. There will also be a hard-standing area for a shed. The shed is on order - a decent 10'x6' apex-roof jobbie.
We currently have a weatherproof external double power socket on the back wall of the house (see diag). I assume this is a spur off of a socket on the mains running inside the house.
How best to get power to the shed? It will only need to be for lighting (probably LED) and a couple of 13A sockets. The shed will mostly be storage, maybe a little workshop bench. It will never be used for heavy-duty stuff (I can do anything like this in the garage, should I ever need to).
I thought about running some armoured cable whilst the ground was dug for the paving area, but where to run it to? To the existing waterproof sockets (and terminate with a 13A plug)? Or to the nearest wall of the house, where there are numerous sockets inside (the nearest bit of the house is a kitchen). Can I take a spur off of an existing internal socket, through the wall, with an appropriately protected junction box outside, or something?
I want to avoid trailing/tacked cable runs as much as possible, but would be OK with a short amount down into the ground from socket height.
Also, could I create a 'lighting circuit' and 'power circuit' in the shed, from one feed, or should I just install sockets and use plugged lighting?
Additional info: the consumer unit is in the centre of the house and does have one spare location. I could feasibly run cable from here, through the integral garage and out through an external wall, but this would be more disruptive and more cable-traily. ____________________
Yamaha XJ600 | Yamaha YZF600R Thundercat | KTM 990 SMT | BMW F900XR TE |
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| weasley |
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 weasley World Chat Champion

Joined: 16 Oct 2010 Karma :    
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| Ribenapigeon |
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 Ribenapigeon Super Spammer

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| bugeye_bob |
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 bugeye_bob World Chat Champion

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| robs321 |
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 robs321 Could Be A Chat Bot

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| Howling TerrorOutOfOffice |
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 Howling TerrorOutOfOffice Super Spammer

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| stinkwheel |
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 stinkwheel Bovine Proctologist

Joined: 12 Jul 2004 Karma :    
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 Posted: 16:57 - 23 Dec 2014 Post subject: |
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It would be better to have a secondary consumer unit in your shed with a lighting and ring RCD. Most of the things you'd be plugging in in a shed wsould warrant that degree of cover.
Either fed from a spare, non-RCD slot in your consumer unit or by adding a new tail from the meter.
Meantime. Conduit is cheap. Lay your conduit from house to shed with a rope through it when you're doing the groundworks and you can then decide at your leisure how you're going to do the electrical install. ____________________ “Rule one: Always stick around for one more drink. That's when things happen. That's when you find out everything you want to know.”
I did the 2010 Round Britain Rally on my 350 Bullet. 89 landmarks, 3 months, 9,500 miles. |
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| weasley |
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 weasley World Chat Champion

Joined: 16 Oct 2010 Karma :    
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| ws4936 |
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 ws4936 World Chat Champion

Joined: 10 Sep 2009 Karma :   
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 Posted: 17:59 - 23 Dec 2014 Post subject: |
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I've personally done this...twice. I have a garage read: plastic shed on the front driveway and a shed out the back. Both are plastic keter big f'off jobbies, and both have armorured cable going to a junction box, then twin and earth going from the junction box to a consumer unit with light and electric circuits run from that.
Armoured cale isn't that expensive(ok it is compared to normal cable - but not in the grand scheme of things) and if anyone that you meet and haven't instructed not to use a spade in your yard, uses a spade in your yard, they will go throu conduit and cable. Do it right, do it once.
/pieceofmind
https://i.share.pho.to/f52c75a3_o.jpeg ____________________ If everything seems under control, you're just not going fast enough. |
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| kawakid |
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 kawakid World Chat Champion

Joined: 15 Mar 2005 Karma :   
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| drzsta |
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 drzsta World Chat Champion

Joined: 20 Apr 2009 Karma :     
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 Posted: 18:29 - 23 Dec 2014 Post subject: |
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Get an electrician to do it. Seeing those inspection elbows on that pvc conduit looks naff. |
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| weasley |
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 weasley World Chat Champion

Joined: 16 Oct 2010 Karma :    
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| stinkwheel |
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 stinkwheel Bovine Proctologist

Joined: 12 Jul 2004 Karma :    
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 Posted: 18:36 - 23 Dec 2014 Post subject: |
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If you've put the conduit in, you can pull the cable through later and make it the correct length to go to both ends in one run.
I suggested it because I presumed you were already on the groundwork phase but still undecided on how you were running the wires and where to.
Having a nice plastic tube you can just run the cable up through makes the install a piece of piss if and when you decide to do it.
There's two sorts of conduit. One is that simple plastic spiral stuff. If you were using that, I'd use armoured cable through it.
Then there is armoured, waterproof stuff like kopex. Effectively the armour you'd find outside the armoured cable. If it's terminated correctly, you should be able to use standard mains cable inside it. IP67 rated, nothing is getting through that sucker but it's expensive.
If I was doing the job. I'd bung in some cheap, spiral plastic conduit for now while I have the hole in the ground (you can have it coming up through the concrete shed base). I'd pull my armoured cable through once I'd decided exactly where and how I was doing it. You could do a second piece to drag a water pipe through in case you ever decide to put a tap in.
Same thing as I did when I had a new base put down for an oil tank. I had the conduit put in at the same time then pulled the pipework through when the tank was actually fitted. ____________________ “Rule one: Always stick around for one more drink. That's when things happen. That's when you find out everything you want to know.”
I did the 2010 Round Britain Rally on my 350 Bullet. 89 landmarks, 3 months, 9,500 miles. |
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| drzsta |
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 drzsta World Chat Champion

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| Chuffin Nora |
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 Chuffin Nora World Chat Champion
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| Furrybiker |
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| janner_10 |
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 janner_10 World Chat Champion

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 janner_10 World Chat Champion

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| goto10 |
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 goto10 World Chat Champion

Joined: 16 Oct 2011 Karma :   
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 Posted: 22:28 - 23 Dec 2014 Post subject: |
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I did this very thing earlier this year - I put armoured cable in directly from the consumer unit and created a radial to the shed - this feeds into the shed's own little consumer unit. I then have the internal shed lights and sockets running on their own MCBs/RCD
I also fitted a remote control/timer thing on the outside of the shed (feeding from the little consumer unit), which runs the garden lights and fountain on a timer/remote control:
https://www.homeeasy.eu/RemoteControl4GangOutdoorSocketKit/HE440%20v2/191/Product/896/ ____________________ '12 NC700S & '12 CB600F Hornet [Stolen by some dickless twat] Suzuki GT500 shed |
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| smegballs |
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 smegballs World Chat Champion
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| Chuffin Nora |
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 Chuffin Nora World Chat Champion
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| Ribenapigeon |
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 Ribenapigeon Super Spammer

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| Ribenapigeon |
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 Ribenapigeon Super Spammer

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| ScaredyCat |
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 ScaredyCat World Chat Champion

Joined: 19 May 2012 Karma :   
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 Posted: 10:23 - 24 Dec 2014 Post subject: |
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This stuff is perfectly legal and doesn't require an electrician to wire it up. If you're only using it for lights it's going to be fine. ____________________ Honda CBF125 ➝ NC700X
Honda CBF125 ↳ Speed Triple |
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 11 years, 5 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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