Hi,
Does anyone know the specs of how electricity is distributed to domestic residences.
Assume you have a terrace of houses on a road. Each house has a meter, and there is a service cable that connects from the house to the "mains". It's that "mains" cable I am interested in.
How many houses does a single cable support. If there are say 20 houses in the terrace, is there one cable or several? What's the max capacity of that cable. If each house has a main 60A fuse, what's the max current draw that cable can support, and if it's exceeded, what blows ( am assuming something further up the distribution grid).
This is prompted by an argument about heat pumps and EV charging. I was arguing that the infrastructure can't support more than a few houses with enough current vs demand.
Limits of domestic electricity distribution
-
- Posts: 30
- Joined: Fri Oct 08, 2021 7:52 pm
-
- Posts: 9072
- Joined: Thu Oct 03, 2013 4:06 pm
Re: Limits of domestic electricity distribution
Generally there's a local substation /s stepping down from 110,000 or other high voltage that gets stepped down ultimately to 415vac 3 phase ..
That three phase plus nuteral it's then split single phase and nuteral to each house giving you 220-250vac going from old colour scheme. One house gets yellow phase one gets red one gets blue and repeat.... Most older house are fused at the meter at 80 a newer homes 100a
I agree with you in terms of the grid and supply outstripping demand this wasn't far from work a few years back
A gas supply issue caused problem this was just one little village
https://www.yorkpress.co.uk/news/181117 ... y-osgodby/
That three phase plus nuteral it's then split single phase and nuteral to each house giving you 220-250vac going from old colour scheme. One house gets yellow phase one gets red one gets blue and repeat.... Most older house are fused at the meter at 80 a newer homes 100a
I agree with you in terms of the grid and supply outstripping demand this wasn't far from work a few years back
A gas supply issue caused problem this was just one little village
https://www.yorkpress.co.uk/news/181117 ... y-osgodby/
If your roughing it, Your doing it wrong
Lack of planning on your part doesn't make it an emergency on mine
Lack of planning on your part doesn't make it an emergency on mine
Re: Limits of domestic electricity distribution
I can't add anything technical, but National Grid seems to agree that there's insufficient infrastructure.GeraldTheBonzai wrote: ↑Mon Jul 15, 2024 5:43 pm Hi,
Does anyone know the specs of how electricity is distributed to domestic residences.
This is prompted by an argument about heat pumps and EV charging. I was arguing that the infrastructure can't support more than a few houses with enough current vs demand.
https://www.morningstar.com/news/dow-jo ... ses-update
£60 bn split UK & US to be invested over the next 5 years including Gas and Electricity..... If they can raise it.
Someone's going to have to pay for it. With current gov policy, this could be a hot potato.
NG's current Market capitalisation: £44.72 bn
Graceful Degradation! Prepping's objective summed up in two words. Turning Disaster into Mild Inconvenience by the power of fore-thought
Not Feeling Optimistic. Let me be wrong
Not Feeling Optimistic. Let me be wrong