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leon
31-01-2017, 02:42 PM
Hi Guys, this one is for any sparkie out there.

My Daughter has just had her kitchen redone and has a new electric stove put in and installed by a professional electrician.

He, the Sparkie wired up a power point inside the pantry , very near to the stove and the said stove is plugged in to this power point with a normal plug type arrangement yet the plug terminals are something close to 20 amp plugs, but this is on all terminals.

The question is, my dear daughter now wants a microwave in the pantry close to the stove plug.

Can i just plug into this 20 amp plug to give the power to the microwave ? :shrug:

Many thanks.

Leon :thumbsup:

PCH
31-01-2017, 03:50 PM
Hi Leon,

I'm not a sparky by trade but yes, you can do that. There's absolutely no reason why you couldn't.

Mosc_007
31-01-2017, 04:03 PM
Sockets are usualy designed so you can put a lower rated plug into it. But not a higher rated plug. I don't see any issue here.

leon
31-01-2017, 07:05 PM
I did think that, but thought it best to ask, many thanks.

Leon

AussieTrooper
31-01-2017, 09:31 PM
Yes. (Electrical engineer here.)

The rating of the plug is determined by the circuit in the wall, ie: the size of the wires.
It's actually the best place to plug in high power use devices.

The only word of caution I would give is to check that you have a safety switch. The higher rated circuits take longer for the fuses to blow on high rated circuits. If you have an old porcelain fuse board, consider getting it replaced.

brian nordstrom
01-02-2017, 04:24 PM
:thumbsup: Leon , we use 15/20 amp single phase leads and plugs at work for our inverter TIG welding machines that can pump out up to 200 amps , the smaller 80-140 amp machines are 10 amp .

For over 200 amps we use 3 phase at 400 volts.

15/20 amp single phase leads are heavier duty and the earth on the male plug is wider and thicker to fit the 15/20 amp female wall socket / FM plug but the phase and neutral are the same size as standard 10 amp plugs .

You can put a 10 amp male end into a 15/20 but you cant fit a 15/20 into a 10 amp wall/FM plug .

Just be sure the earth on the new stove plug is larger than say the one on the jug or TV and the wall socket has a bigger earth slot for the heavier earth of the plug , its quite a lot bigger ( wider and thicker ) and easy to see without measuring .

Also check the circuit breaker that should be only for the 'Stove' as Aussie Trooper says .

Brian