Meet the Other Phone. A phone that grows with your child.

Meet the Other Phone.
A phone that grows with your child.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Housekeeping

Find cleaning advice from other Mumsnetters on our Housekeeping forum.

How do you know what the ampage/wattage is for your cooker?

2 replies

LadyAlysVorpatril · 03/08/2014 18:32

I don't even know if I've phrased that correctly... our cooker broke, we're trying to buy a new one but one of the reviews says make sure you know what your ampage is. How do I find out?

I have tried googling it but to no avail. I can only conclude this is a really simple thing that everyone else already understands? Please enlighten me!

OP posts:
wowfudge · 04/08/2014 08:04

I think this might be to do with whether the cooker just plugs into the electricity socket like any other appliance or whether it has one of those red switches specially for it - often marked 'cooker'. A lot of cheap slot in cookers are the former.

specialsubject · 04/08/2014 14:32

most electric cookers draw a lot of current (amps) and need to be connected to the dedicated 30A circuit. You can get ones that will run off a normal 13A plug, Baby Bellings or similar. Don't do this if you don't need to!

have a look at your fusebox/circuit breaker box; you should have a dedicated ring main for the cooker labelled 30 amps. How i the current cooker connected?

(obviously don't touch anything live!)

New posts on this thread. Refresh page
Swipe left for the next trending thread