by ericmark »
Wed Jun 19, 2019 10:04 pm
As said that is the British standard, however your unlikely to find a designer when on the phone, your talking to some one who is reading the BS standard, and playing safe.
It is not the socket that has the heat problem, it is the plug, a fuse works by the link melting, and so they must get hot, that's how they work, and the heat has to be dissipated, to the air and to the socket, the solid line pin could clearly transmit more heat into the socket than the new safety line pins as plastic does not transfer heat as good as metal, and also the tighter the grip on the pins the more heat is transferred.
This means the socket gets hot, if it gets too hot the spring tension can be lost, and then you get a poor connection and even more heat builds up.
So on average over an hour or so the load per pair needs to be below 20 amp to give time for heat to escape, however that's an average and if the time it is at 26 amp is same as time at 14 amp over the hour, the average is still 20 amp.
Also remember all plugs should be in free air, if behind an appliance unless the appliance has a fan was with most ovens, then it's not in free air, even colour matters, black will get rid of heat better than white. And some plugs are bigger than others and the bigger they are the better they can get rid of heat.
Using a 15A fuse and a radial circuit the 15A un-fused plug of yeastier year ran much cooler, having an immersion heater on a 15A plug was no problem as nothing was producing heat, but with 13A plug the fuse produces heat over an extended time and inside an airing cupboard there is not much air flow so common for a 13A plug to over heat. Putting the fuse in a fused connection unit it can transfer heat into the wall, so they work a lot better.
You can get grid plates that take two 13A sockets, and you can get twin back boxes so two plugs can be right next to each other, technically these would allow you to draw 13A each, however the same problem arises one plug will heat up the socket so there is less differential so using full 26A over an extended time can cause over heating.
So even with a single socket in free air I would not plug in an immersion heater, but with a washing machine and dish washer, although both rated at 13A would be happy both plugged into a double socket as the time it is at 13A is so short. And it takes time to heat up.