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Ring circuit

 

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Ring circuit



 
 
In electricity supply, a ring final circuit or ring circuit (informally also ring main or just ring) is an electrical wiring
Electrical wiring

Electrical wiring in general refers to insulated conductor used to carry electricity, and associated devices. This article describes general aspects of electrical wiring as used to provide power in buildings and structures, commonly referred to as building wiring....
 technique developed and primarily used in the United Kingdom
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 that provides two independent conductors for live, neutral and protective earth within a building for each connected load or socket.

This design enables the use of smaller-diameter wire than would be used in a radial circuit of equivalent total current.






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Encyclopedia


In electricity supply, a ring final circuit or ring circuit (informally also ring main or just ring) is an electrical wiring
Electrical wiring

Electrical wiring in general refers to insulated conductor used to carry electricity, and associated devices. This article describes general aspects of electrical wiring as used to provide power in buildings and structures, commonly referred to as building wiring....
 technique developed and primarily used in the United Kingdom
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 that provides two independent conductors for live, neutral and protective earth within a building for each connected load or socket.

This design enables the use of smaller-diameter wire than would be used in a radial circuit of equivalent total current. Ideally, the ring acts like two radial circuits proceeding in opposite directions around the ring, the dividing point between them dependent on the distribution of load in the ring. If the load is evenly split across the two directions, the current in each direction is half of the total, allowing the use of wire with half the current-carrying capacity. In practice, the load does not always split evenly, so thicker wire is used.

Description

In a single-phase system, the ring starts at the consumer unit
Consumer unit

A consumer unit is a box of fuse or circuit breaker, usually arranged in a single row. This is unlike a distribution board which has multiple rows of fuses or breakers and usually serves two or more locations, which may be split phase, two phase, two phases taken from three phase, or three phases....
 (also known as "fuse
Fuse (electrical)

In electronics and electrical engineering a fuse is a type of overcurrent protection device. Its essential component is a metal wire or strip that melts when too much current flows, which breaks the electrical network in which it is connected, thus protecting the circuit's other components from damage due to excessive current....
 box" or "breaker
Circuit breaker

A circuit breaker is an automatically-operated Electricity switch designed to protect an Electrical network from damage caused by Overcurrent or short circuit....
 box"), visits each socket
Domestic AC power plugs and sockets

AC power plugs and sockets are devices for removably connecting electrically-operated devices to the mains electricity.An electric plug is a gender of connectors and fasteners electrical connector with contact prongs to connect mechanically and electrically to slots in the matching female socket....
 in turn, and then returns to the consumer unit. In a three-phase
Three-phase

In electrical engineering, three-phase electric power systems have at least three conductors carrying voltage waveforms that are 2p/3 radians offset in time....
 system, the ring (which is almost always single-phase) is fed from a single-pole breaker in the distribution board
Distribution board

A distribution board is a component of an electricity supply system which divides an electrical power feed into subsidiary Circuit , while providing a protective Fuse or circuit breaker for each circuit, in a common Enclosure ....
.

Ring circuits are commonly used in British wiring with fused 13 A plug
Plug

Plug may refer to:* Plug * Plug , a family of fishing lures* Plug , a planting technique* An electrical connector** DC plug, or DC connector...
s to BS 1363
BS 1363

British Standard BS 1363 specifies the most common type of domestic AC power plugs and sockets that are used in the United Kingdom, Cyprus, Republic of Ireland, Malta, Malaysia, Singapore and many former British overseas territory....
. They are generally wired with 2.5 mm² cable and protected by a 30 A fuse
Fuse (electrical)

In electronics and electrical engineering a fuse is a type of overcurrent protection device. Its essential component is a metal wire or strip that melts when too much current flows, which breaks the electrical network in which it is connected, thus protecting the circuit's other components from damage due to excessive current....
, an older 30 A circuit breaker
Circuit breaker

A circuit breaker is an automatically-operated Electricity switch designed to protect an Electrical network from damage caused by Overcurrent or short circuit....
, or a Europe
Europe

Europe is, conventionally, one of the world's seven continents. Comprising the westernmost peninsula of Eurasia, Europe is generally divided from Asia to its east by the water divide of the Ural Mountains, the Ural , the Caspian Sea, and by the Caucasus Mountains to the southeast....
an harmonised 32 A circuit breaker. Sometimes 4 mm² cable is used if very long cable runs (causing volt drop issues) or derating factors such as thermal insulation
Thermal insulation

The term thermal insulation can refer to materials used to reduce the rate of heat transfer, or the methods and processes used to reduce heat transfer....
 are involved. 1.5 mm² mineral-insulated copper-clad cable
Mineral-insulated copper-clad cable

Mineral-insulated copper-clad cable is a variety of electrical cable made from copper conductors inside a copper sheath, insulated by inorganic magnesium oxide powder....
 ('pyro') may also be used (as mineral insulated cable can withstand heat more effectively than normal PVC) though more care must be taken with regard to voltage drop on longer runs.

Many lay people in the UK refer to any circuit as a "ring" and the term "lighting ring" is often heard from novices. It is not unheard of to see lighting circuits wired as rings of cable (though usually still with a breaker below the cable rating) in DIY installations.

History and use


The ring circuit
Electrical network

An electrical network is an interconnection of electrical elements such as resistors, inductors, capacitors, transmission lines, voltage sources, current sources, and switches....
 and the associated BS 1363
BS 1363

British Standard BS 1363 specifies the most common type of domestic AC power plugs and sockets that are used in the United Kingdom, Cyprus, Republic of Ireland, Malta, Malaysia, Singapore and many former British overseas territory....
 plug and socket system were developed in Britain during 1942–1947. They are commonly used in the United Kingdom
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 and to a lesser extent in the Republic of Ireland
Republic of Ireland

Ireland is an Island country in north-western Europe. The modern Sovereignty state occupies about five-sixths of the island of Ireland, which was partitioned by the British on 3 May 1921....
. It is likely that they are also used in parts of the Commonwealth of Nations
Commonwealth of Nations

The Commonwealth of Nations, also known as the Commonwealth or the British Commonwealth, is an intergovernmental organization of fifty-three independent member states....
, where Britain had design influence in the past.

The ring main came about because Britain had to embark on a massive rebuilding programme following World War II
World War II

World War II, or the Second World War , was a global military conflict which involved a Participants in World War II, including all of the great powers, organised into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War II and the Axis powers....
.. There was an acute shortage of copper, and it was necessary to devise a scheme that used less copper than would normally be the case. The scheme was specified to use 13 Amp fused socket outlets, and several designs for the plugs and sockets appeared. Only the square pin (BS1363) system survives, but the round pin D&S system was still in use in many locations well into the 1980s. This latter plug had the distinctive feature that the fuse was also the live pin and unscrewed from the plug body.

The ring circuit was devised during a time of copper
Copper

Copper is a chemical element with the symbol Cu and atomic number 29.It is a ductile metal with very high thermal and electrical conductivity....
 shortage to allow two 3 kW
Kw

kw or KW may refer to:* Kenworth* Kuwait* kW, kilowatt* Kw, the self-ionization of water* kw, the Cornish language * KW, Kitchener-Waterloo, Ontario, Canada...
 heaters
Convector heater

A convector heater is a heater which operates by air convection currents circulating through the body of the appliance, and across its heating element....
 to be used in any two locations and to allow some power to small appliances, and to keep total copper use low. It has stayed the most common circuit configuration in the UK, although the 20A radial (essentially breaking each ring in half and putting the halves on a separate breaker) is becoming more common. Splitting a ring into two 20A radials can be a useful technique where one leg of the ring is damaged and cannot easily be replaced.

Another advantage of ring circuits was an economy of cable and labour, as one could connect a cable between two existing 15A radially wired sockets to make one 30A ring, then adding as many sockets as were desired. This was an important consideration in the austerity of the 1940s. This would leave the ring supplied by two 15A fuses, which worked well enough in practice, even if unconventional.

Many pre-war (round pin) installations used double pole fusing. When two 15A radials were converted to a ring on these systems, the ring would then be supplied by no fewer than 4 fuses. Such circuits are rare today.

Installation rules

Rules for ring circuits say that the cable rating must be no less than two thirds of the rating of the protective device. This means that the risk of sustained overload
Overload

Overload may refer to:* Overload * Audio Overload, an audio player that plays music from various video game music audio files* Overload , an episode of the television series CSI: Crime Scene Investigation...
ing of the cable can be considered minimal. In practice, however, it is extremely uncommon to encounter a ring with a protective device other than a 30A fuse, 30A breaker or 32A breaker, and a cable size other than those mentioned above.

The IEE
Institution of Electrical Engineers

The Institution of Electrical Engineers or IEE was a British professional organisation for electronics, electrical, manufacturing and Information technology professionals....
 Wiring Regulations (BS 7671
BS 7671

British Standard BS 7671 "Requirements for electrical installations" is the national standard in the United Kingdom for low voltage electrical installations....
) permit an unlimited number of socket outlets to be installed on a ring circuit, provided that the floor area served does not exceed 100 m². In practice most small and medium houses have one ring circuit per storey, with larger premises having more.

An installation designer may determine by experience and calculation whether additional circuits are required for areas of high demand - for example it is common practice to put kitchen
Kitchen

A kitchen, is a room or part of a room used for food preparation including cooking, and sometimes also for eating and entertaining guests, if the kitchen is large enough and designed to be used that way....
s on their own ring circuit or sometimes a ring circuit shared with a utility room
Utility room

A utility room is a room in a house, which is the descendant of the scullery . The utility room typically contains washing machine, tumble dryer, and other appliances which, in houses without such a room, would be in the kitchen or laundry room....
 to avoid putting a heavy load at one point on the main downstairs ring circuit. A heavy concentration of load close together on a ring circuit can cause minor overloading of one of the cables if near the end of the ring, so kitchens should not be wired at one end of a ring circuit.

Unfused spurs from a ring wired in the same cable as the ring are allowed to run one single or double socket (the use of two singles was previously allowed but was banned because of people replacing them with doubles) or one fused connection unit (FCU). Spurs may either start from a socket or be joined to the ring cable with a junction box or other approved method of joining cables. Triple and larger sockets are generally fused and therefore can also be placed on a spur.

It is not permitted to have more spurs than sockets on the ring, and it is considered bad practice by most electrician
Electrician

An electrician is a tradesman specializing in electrical wiring of buildings and related equipment. Electricians may be employed in the installation of new electrical components or the maintenance and repair of existing electrical infrastructure....
s to have spurs in a new installation (some think they are bad practice in all cases).

Where loads other than BS 1363 sockets are connected to a ring circuit or it is desired to place more than one socket for low power equipment on a spur, a BS 1363 fused connection unit (FCU) is used. In the case of fixed appliances this will be a switched fused connection unit (SFCU) to provide a point of isolation for the appliance, but in other cases such as feeding multiple lighting points (putting lighting on a ring through is generally considered bad practice in new installation but is often done when adding lights to an existing property) or multiple sockets, an unswitched one is often preferable.

Fixed appliances with a power rating over 3 kW (for example, showers and some electric cookers) or with a non-trivial power demand for long periods (for example, immersion heaters) are no longer recommended to be connected to a ring circuit, but instead are connected to their own dedicated circuit. There are however plenty of older installations with such loads on a ring circuit.

Criticism


The final ring-circuit concept has been criticized in a number of ways, and some of these disadvantages could explain the lack of widespread adoption outside the United Kingdom.

The only way to see the pros and cons of ring circuits is to compare them to the other option: radials.

Fault conditions are not apparent when in use

Ring circuits continue to operate without the user being aware of any problem if there are fault conditions or installation errors that make the circuit unsafe:
  • Part of the ring missing or loose connections result in 2.5 mm² cables running above rated current at times, resulting in reduced cable life.
    • Radials with a loose connection will overheat severely and be an immediate fire risk.
    • Radials with a broken connection will not function (if L or N broken), or function with no safety earth connection (if E broken).
  • Accidental cross connection between two 32 A rings means that the fault current protection reaches 64 A and the required fault disconnection times are violated grossly.
    • Testing at installation addresses this.
  • Ring spur installations encourage using three connectors in one terminal, which can cause one to become loose and overheat.
    • The same situation occurs with both radial and ring circuits when branching off is used.
  • Rings encourage the installation of too many spurs on a ring, leading to a risk of overheating, especially if spur cables are too long


Complexity of safety tests


Testing ring circuits takes 5–6 times longer than testing radial circuits. The installation tests required for the safe operation of a ring circuit are substantially more time consuming than those for a radial circuit, and DIY installers or electricians qualified in other countries may not be familiar with them.

Balancing requirement

Regulation 433-02-04 of BS 7671
BS 7671

British Standard BS 7671 "Requirements for electrical installations" is the national standard in the United Kingdom for low voltage electrical installations....
 requires that the installed load is distributed around the ring such that no part of the cable exceeds its capacity. This requirement is difficult to fulfill and may be largely ignored in practice, as loads are often co-located (washing machine, tumble dryer, dish washer all next to kitchen sink) and not necessarily near the centre of the ring.

Electromagnetic interference

Ring circuits can generate strong unwanted magnetic fields. In a normal (non-ring, radial) circuit, the current flowing in the circuit must return through (almost exactly) the same path through which it came, especially if the live and neutral conductors are kept in close proximity of each other and form a twisted pair
Twisted pair

Twisted pair cabling is a form of wiring in which two conductors are twisted together for the purposes of canceling out electromagnetic interference from external sources; for instance, electromagnetic radiation from unshielded twisted pair cables, and crosstalk between neighboring pairs....
. This prevents the circuit forming a large magnetic coil (loop antenna
Loop antenna

A loop antenna has a continuous conducting path leading from one conductor of a two-wire transmission line to the other conductor. All planar loops are directional antennas with a sharp null, and have a radiation pattern similar to the dipole antenna with E and H fields interchanged....
), which would otherwise induce a magnetic field at the AC frequency (50 or 60 Hz).

In a ring circuit, on the other hand, it is possible that the live and neutral currents are not equal on each side of the ring. Mains-frequency currents follow the path of least resistance, and it is possible, especially with aging oxidized contacts, that from a socket, the lowest-resistance live connection is along the left-hand side of the ring, and the lowest-resistance neutral connection is along the right-hand side. As a result, current is flowing around the ring and will therefore induce a magnetic field
Magnetic field

A magnetism field is a vector field which can exert a magnetic force on moving electric charges and on magnetic dipoles . When placed in a magnetic field, magnetic dipoles tend to align their axes parallel to the magnetic field....
. In the extreme case of a defect ring circuit, the live connection could become completely interrupted on one side of the ring and the neutral connection on the other, and then the full current would supply the magnetic field. This can lead to substantial electromagnetic interference
Electromagnetic interference

Electromagnetic interference is an unwanted disturbance that affects an electrical circuit due to either electromagnetic conduction or electromagnetic radiation emitted from an external source....
, such as mains hum
Mains hum

Electric hum, mains hum, or power line hum is an audible oscillation at the Utility frequency of the mains alternating current, which is usually 50 or 60 hertz depending on the local electric utility configuration ....
 in audio devices, accidental triggering of alarm and protection devices (burglar alarms, RCDs, etc.), malfunctions of consumer electronics and medical devices, ground loop
Ground loop (electricity)

In an electrical system, a ground loop usually refers to a current, generally unwanted, in a electrical conduction connecting two points that are supposed to be at the same potential, often ground , but are actually at different potentials....
s, etc.

Overcurrent protection

Ring circuits provide low protection against overcurrent
Overcurrent

In electricity supply, overcurrent or excess current is a situation where a larger than intended electric current exists through a conductor, leading to excessive generation of heat and the risk of damaging infrastructure and equipment and causing fires....
s. The purpose of ring circuits is to supply a large number of sockets, therefore they are protected only with high-rated overcurrent circuit breakers (typically 32 A). In comparison, the radial circuits used in other countries typically supply only a small number of sockets and are therefore protected with lower-rated circuit breakers (typically 10–20 A). As a result, countries using ring circuits find it necessary to add additional lower-rated fuses into the plugs of each appliance. This does create a possible improvement in safety in that an appliance with blown plug fuse will not be live when plugged in again (unless the fuse is first replaced), whereas with fuseless plugs a faulty appliance remains potentially dangerous to plug in, though in most cases it would trip a lower-rated circuit breaker if plugged in again.

This incompatibility in the overcurrent protection of appliance leads between countries using ring and radial circuits has been a major stumbling block on the road to worldwide standardization of domestic AC power plugs and sockets
Domestic AC power plugs and sockets

AC power plugs and sockets are devices for removably connecting electrically-operated devices to the mains electricity.An electric plug is a gender of connectors and fasteners electrical connector with contact prongs to connect mechanically and electrically to slots in the matching female socket....
. Although plug-fuses can, in principle, be better matched to the maximum current required by an appliance, in practice, some plugs in the UK are merely fitted with a fuse of the maximum permitted rating of 13 A, resulting in safety improvement with some appliances but not all. This is not a problem since all appliances are required to be safe with a 13A fuse, but it does mean the potential safety advantage is only partially realised and that the fused plug offers little advantage over an unfused plug used on radial circuit with a 13 A or lower circuit breaker. The introduction of regulations requiring new appliances to be sold with correctly fused pre-fitted plugs improves this situation further.

See also

  • Electrical wiring (UK)
    Electrical wiring (UK)

    The modern UK standards and regulations for electrical wiring no longer differ substantially from Electrical wiring . However, there are a number of noteworthy national peculiarities, habits and traditions associated with domestic electrical wiring in the UK that differ significantly from other countries....