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DB for hotel in Australia

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AusLee

Electrical
Sep 22, 2004
259
Hi,

In some countries they use one DB above the false ceiling for each couple of hotel rooms. So each floor will have one DB and several sub DBs along the corridor, above ceiling.

Can someone please tell if this practice is used in Australia? would the location above ceiling next to an access hatch be approved or considered as restricted under AS3000-Section 2.9.2.5?

Just why do they use this kind of sub-distribution in a hotel environment? Why not just straight circuits from the floor DB?


 
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Hi AusLee,

I can't answer the question since I'm on the other side of the world -- but I have a question for you, just for my personal edification: What is a DB? I suspect you mean distribution board, but I've never used or read that term myself.

Thanks and good on ya,

Goober Dave
 
I'm not familiar with your TLA.

Bill
--------------------
"Why not the best?"
Jimmy Carter
 
I've not heard of a DB above the ceiling (and yes DB is distribution board).

The reason for doing smaller boards is because it is much easier to add a new circuit, rather than run all the way back to the floor db. That and it would save on cable runs. I personally would be a bit concerned about putting them in the ceiling.
 
first time to hear about db
but i think it is good idea to make it on thecelling
 
Thanks all for the ideas.

PS. Yes DB is Distribution Board and that is/will be the new term for it in IEC 61439.3. Refer this link:


That is the name also given to them in AS 3439.3 and IEC60439.3. Refer the last two words in the extra long title:


 
NZ and Aus use the same standard, and every hotel or motel I've stayed in (including Aus) the room has had a small DB usually just inside the entrance flush mounted on the wall. The main reason for one DB per room is the the DB has an RCBO as the main switch, and has the master room contactor that turns the power off when you pull your key tag out of the wall switch. If the RCBO trips it is easy to get at to reset, up in the ceiling would be a call out to maintenance and inconvenient to the customer. Having a DB in the ceiling is acceptable under AS3000 but I wouldn't do it as you introduce a fall hazard just to get to it.

Cheers niallnz
 
Hi,

After the introduction if Section J8.3 in BCA and the requirement for separate metering for lighting, power and HVAC, the use of one DB per room or one DB per couple of rooms is very complicated.

Thanks niallnz for the tip regarding the RCBO. I think the first GPO in the room can have the RCD on board, as in hospitals (AS3003).

Cheers.
 
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