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Do-It-Yourself (DIY) Question & Answer Forum
Kitchen Rewire - and part P questions
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<blockquote data-quote="momist" data-source="post: 182972" data-attributes="member: 13162"><p>I do quite agree. My question was though, do I need to replace the old-standard stranded wires, or can I re-use them?</p><p></p><p>If you re-read my post, I don't need a dedicated supply. The oven and hob are gas (that alien fuel that carries so much more energy at less cost), and only a small warming oven and the ignition system and clock needs a standard socket for its 13A plug top. This will happily connect into whatever ring. I would have it on a dedicated ring just for the kitchen, if doing a full re-wire. However, I have a cunning plan which saves a lot of re-wiring, if I can get away with sharing the kitchen ring with the conservatory, and one socket in an adjacent room, _and_ can re-use the stranded cables (suitably tested for insulation and continuity!). Hence my question, for which I which have not yet seen an answer.</p><p></p><p>Does anyone know if this is OK?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="momist, post: 182972, member: 13162"] I do quite agree. My question was though, do I need to replace the old-standard stranded wires, or can I re-use them? If you re-read my post, I don't need a dedicated supply. The oven and hob are gas (that alien fuel that carries so much more energy at less cost), and only a small warming oven and the ignition system and clock needs a standard socket for its 13A plug top. This will happily connect into whatever ring. I would have it on a dedicated ring just for the kitchen, if doing a full re-wire. However, I have a cunning plan which saves a lot of re-wiring, if I can get away with sharing the kitchen ring with the conservatory, and one socket in an adjacent room, _and_ can re-use the stranded cables (suitably tested for insulation and continuity!). Hence my question, for which I which have not yet seen an answer. Does anyone know if this is OK? [/QUOTE]
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Kitchen Rewire - and part P questions
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