My kitchen has inadequate heating so I've bought an electric plinth heater. I was intending to fit a 3-pin plug and use a free socket but the instructions that came with the heater say to have a qualified electrician, who is a member of the NICEIC and who will comply with the IEE and local regulations, connect it using fixed wiring via a double pole switched fused spur outlet. is this really necessary? or will my plan result in me dying for the second time in a week?
If you're dead who's paying the fee?
Does it come with a plug?
EDIT: Can i have your bikes if your die?
If it causes the electric to trip it'll be the Plinth of Darkness.
igmc
it doesn't come with a plug
If it causes the electric to trip it'll be the Plinth of Darkness.
๐
What is it's current rating?
If it's 13A or less, just stick a plug on the end of the cable.
And yes, you will die. Eventually.
It'll be better to wire it into a switch fuse outlet. You can spur this from an existing socket on the ring but it an awful lot more work than fitting a plug. It'd probably be fine with a plug and correctly rated fuse but failure to follow the manufacturers instructions may be an issue with insurance if it does burn the house down. Your house, your call.
EDIT: Just to add, if you do fit a plug fit a good, branded one, not a pound shop special. Some cheap ones really aren't up to higher current draw for prolonged periods.
Personally I wouldn't hesitate but I work with some serious electricity and have a cavalier attitude to health and safety and wiring regulations
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it says use 13A fuse in the outlet. this is why I was figuring a plug would be OK. it's not any more powerful than a stand-alone electric heater I have