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Topic: Tripping an EHU/campsite supply
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13/5/2011 at 12:41am
Location: Outfit:
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The supply voltage in the UK should now be 230 volts which can make a difference when working out amps...see below which seems to suggest 240 volts is still the norm
Supply voltage
Since 1960, the supply voltage in UK domestic premises has been 240 V AC (RMS) at 50 Hz. In 1988, a Europe-wide agreement was reached to unify the various national voltages, which ranged at the time from 220 V to 240 V, to a common European standard called 230V (CENELEC Harmonization Document HD 472 S1:1988).
The standard nominal supply voltage in domestic single-phase 50 Hz installations in the UK is still 240V AC (RMS), but since 1 January 1995 (Electricity Supply Regulations, SI 1994, No. 3021) this has an an asymmetric voltage tolerance of 230 V+10%-6% (216.2–253 V), which covers the same voltage range as conteinental 220v supplies to the new unified 230v standard. This was supposed to be widened to 230 V ±10% (207-253 V), but the time of this change has been put back repeatedly and currently sits in 2008 (BS 7697). The old standard was 240 V ±6% (225.6–254.4 V), which is mostly contained within the new range, and so in practice suppliers have had no reason to actually change voltages.
The continued deviation in the UK from the harmonised European voltage has been criticised in particular by light bulb manufacturers, who require tighter voltage tolerances to optimise the operating temperature and lifetime of their products, and who currently have to continue producing separate 230 V and 240 V versions.[citation needed]
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13/5/2011 at 4:42pm
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Quote: Originally posted by jonandtom on 13/5/2011
Oops, at any one time we have a 2kw heater, light, laptop, phone chagers plugged in.
Weve never had a trip though??
At 230v which the following conversion table seems to use, a 2000w (2kw) heater draws 8.70 amps. You may just about get by adding very low power things like a light, laptop, phone charger etc; as I believe there may be some tolerance as to if and when the fuses trip.
I, like others, have heard stories of campsites being blacked out by someone misusing or overloading the electrical supply but as the OP suggests we very rarely hear from anyone who has actually done it.
The figures I always follow though are the ones in the below table based on a 230 volt supply.
WATTS TO AMPS CONVERSION
60 Watts = 0.26 Amp
100 Watts = 0.43 Amp
200 Watts = 0.87 Amp
300 Watts = 1.30 Amp
400 Watts = 1.74 Amp
500 Watts = 2.17 Amp
600 Watts = 2.61 Amp
700 Watts = 3.04 Amp
800 Watts = 3.48 Amp
900 Watts = 3.91 Amp
1000 Watts = 4.35 Amp
1100 Watts = 4.78 Amp
1200 Watts = 5.22 Amp
1300 Watts = 5.65 Amp
1400 Watts = 6.09 Amp
1500 Watts = 6.52 Amp
1600 Watts = 6.96 Amp
1700 Watts = 7.39 Amp
1800 Watts = 7.83 Amp
1900 Watts = 8.26 Amp
2000 Watts = 8.70 Amp
2100 Watts = 9.13 Amp
2200 Watts = 9.57 Amp
2300 Watts = 10.00 Amp
2400 Watts = 10.43 Amp
2500 Watts = 10.87 Amp
2600 Watts = 11.30 Amp
2700 Watts = 11.74 Amp
2800 Watts = 12.17Amp
2900 Watts = 12.61 Amp
3000 Watts = 13.04 Amp
3100 Watts = 13.48 Amp
3200 Watts = 13.91 Amp
3300 Watts = 14.35 Amp
3400 Watts = 14.78 Amp
3500 Watts = 15.22Amp
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