447 Power
There are two sets of circuits now in use: the 'old' ones already installed when we arrived, and the 'new' ones which we have added. The former are all supplied via old-fashioned fuses installed in a fusebox in the (locked) power intake room and, except for the kitchen, do not have additional (ie RCD) protection. The new circuits are connected through local distribution boards ('Consumer Units') via a new main board, all using circuit breakers (MCBs) with RCD protection on most circuits. The status of all of the breakers can be seen without opening the units.
Phase allocation
- We have a three-phase supply and need to keep our consumption on each phase roughly equal.
- This means that different areas, even if adjacent, may be on different phases. Do NOT use extension leads from one area to feed equipment in another.
- Remember - NEVER CROSS THE STREAMS! ... er ... PHASES!
Basement
Existing lighting remains in situ, along with some wall sockets (mostly at main stairs end). New circuits will be provisioned via new distribution boxes as follows:
- Box A: All power, except overhead lighting circuits, which is used in the wood workshop.
- Box B: All power, except overhead lighting circuits, which is used in the 'dirty metal' workshop.
- Box C: All power, except overhead lighting circuits, which is used in the biolab and wet room
- Box D: Power circuits, except overhead lighting, for equipment in open workshop area.
- Box E: possible 3-phase 16A power circuit. Not in current use,
- Box F: Power for server stack, future CNC workshop, and additional circuits.
Ground Floor
This will be similar to downstairs in terms of getting the power to needed areas, though there are more socket points already in situ; New local distribution boxes are as follows:
- Box J: Supplies sockets in electronics desks, entrance, social space and (part of) central area. Also supplies emergency exit lighting above stairs and at main entrance.Brown/Red/Phase 1
- Box K: Supplies sockets and equipment in local area and circuit to sub-box K2 supplying outside. Black/Blue/Phase 2
- Box L: Supplies the two socket rings in the new classroom, plus corridor. Also supplies the emergency exit lighting at each end of corridor. Grey/Yellow/Phase 3
- Existing: mostly Brown/Red/Phase 1
Cable Colour Codes
- Once upon a time the colour codes in the UK were black neutral, green earth, red live - phase 1, yellow and blue other two live phases when using a 3-phase supply.
Then along came "European Harmonization" and everything changed. In your home "red-black-green" became "brown-blue-green/yellow" and it wasn't too bad. But in the three-phase world the primary (and easily identifiable) red-yellow-blue became "brown-grey-black" which don't look much different in the semi-dark. Yes, black was now a *live* wire, not neutral. And yea, electricians up and down the land of the Angles got most distraught. Especially when they were laying steel-wire-armoured (swa) cables.
- At the London Hackspace we have a mix of old and new cables, used for a mix of purposes, because we try to reuse everything to reduce expenditure. This means that you must always check what a wire is being used for and NOT trust the original colour.
- Where the original colours are red-yellow-blue and it is now carrying single phase then red=live, blue=neutral, yellow=earth
- Where the original colours are brown-black-grey and it is now carrying single phase then brown=live, black=neutral, grey=earth
Tape will usually be used at each end of the cable to correctly identify the use. These colourways are not necessarily a 'standard' but are easiest to work out as live and neutral always follow one old code and one new code, with the most obvious red/brown being live, and blue/black as neutral.
Queries
If you have any queries or want special provision for something, talk to User:AlisonW.
Works list
- See Power works list
Metering
The power meter is one of these: EDMI Mk10D