I've bought an electric hob and electric oven, to replace an old gas hob and electric oven - but I'm starting to wonder if I can power both of the new items! I'd be very grateful for a clearer idea of my options...
New hob rating = 6.6 kW, new oven rating = 3.6 kW.
The old oven is fed from its own 32A type B MCB, running to a combined cooker switch / single 13A socket.
The old gas hob ignition is wired to a fused/switched spur unit on the kitchen ring. The ring looks to be wired with 2.5mmT+E, and is protected with a 32A type B MCB. The kitchen ring also powers the kettle, washer, fridge, freezer, toaster.
The new hob will draw 27.5 amps with all the rings on full, so that could easily be fed from the 32A cooker circuit. But the new oven would draw a further 15.0 amps, giving a total of 42.5 amps. So I'm not sure how to proceed. The cooker is on exactly the wrong side of the house to run a new cable back to the board, and with solid concrete floor downstairs, and uncut sheet flooring upstairs, running new cable all the way back is a last resort, though perhaps a professional spark would spot a possible route that I've missed.
FWIW, the house is 10 years old and has a split load consumer unit, with a 30mA 63A RCD protecting everything except lighting. The main switch and the meter fuse are rated at 100A. The meter seems to be rated at 80A. The central heating uses gas.
What are my options?
Presumably 42.5 Amps is far too much for the 32 Amp circuit, even allowing for how rarely the oven and all 4 rings will all be on full power?
I guess the 32 amp cooker cable *might* be protected conservatively: could I tell this with any accuracy by measuring the conductors with a vernier gauge?
Is it possible to power the 15 amp oven from the downstairs ring, or are fused spur units only rated up to 13 amps? That assumes that 17 amps would suffice for the other devices (kettle, washer, fridge, freezer, toaster) which I guess it would do at a pinch.
Many thanks for any pointers!
- Martin.