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Free Cooker Circuit & Diversity Calculator

Cooker Circuit & Diversity Calculator | TMUK Group Ltd

Cooker Circuit Calculator

Load Sizing & BS 7671 Diversity Modeller

1. Appliance Specifications
kW
Add the full nameplate ratings of the oven and hob if wired to the same circuit.
Adding a socket inherently increases the peak potential design current by 5 Amps.
2. Installation Geography
Running cables through insulation greatly reduces their current-carrying capacity.
m

Minimum T&E Cable Size

0.0 mm²

Evaluating Safety Thresholds...

Load & Diversity Profile
Raw 100% Current 0.0 A
Diversified Load (Ib) 0.0 A
Diversity Applied 0%
Protection & Compliance
Required MCB (In) 0A
Cable Capacity (Iz) 0.0 A
Voltage Drop (Vd) 0.0 V
Engineering System Validation

Understanding Cooker Circuit Diversity

Unlike electric showers or space heaters which represent a continuous maximum load, domestic electric cookers, ovens, and hobs never draw their full nameplate rating indefinitely. A four-ring induction hob and double oven may mathematically sum to 12kW, but you will rarely have all four rings on "Boost" and both ovens running at maximum temperature simultaneously for an extended period. Because ovens are thermostatically controlled, they constantly cycle on and off to maintain heat.

The Standard 10A + 30% Diversity Rule

To prevent over-engineering and installing unnecessarily thick, expensive cables, electrical guidelines (such as the IET On-Site Guide, Appendix A) permit a standardised diversity calculation for domestic cooking appliances.

The mathematical rule to determine the Design Current (Ib) is:

  • Take the first 10 Amps of the total raw load.
  • Add 30% of the remaining load.
  • If the cooker control unit (the red isolator switch on the wall) incorporates a 13A socket outlet, add a flat 5 Amps to the total.

For example, a 10kW cooker draws approximately 43.5 Amps raw at 230V. Applying diversity: 10A + (30% of 33.5A) = 20.05A. Adding 5A for the socket outlet yields a final diversified design current ($I_b$) of 25.05 Amps. This massive reduction allows the use of a standard 32A MCB and a 6.0 mm² cable, rather than needing an industrial 50A supply.

Thermal Insulation and Cable Sizing

While diversity reduces the calculated load, the physical environment of the cable dictates its safe capacity ($I_z$). A 6.0 mm² Twin & Earth cable clipped directly to a joist (Method C) is rated to carry 47 Amps, easily accommodating a 32A cooker circuit. However, if that exact same 6.0 mm² cable is buried deep under loft insulation (Method 103), its capacity plummets to 23.5 Amps. In this scenario, running the oven for Christmas dinner would cause the cable to overheat, mandating an upgrade to a 10.0 mm² cross-section.

ENGINEERING DISCLAIMER: This calculator utilises data from BS 7671 Appendix 4 for 70°C flat thermoplastic (PVC) Twin & Earth copper cables. Diversity factors are intended for standard domestic properties; commercial kitchens, restaurants, and bakeries must not use this formula and require bespoke continuous load assessments.