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Your cooker has its own circuit rated to 32a with a 6mm supply cable, which is on the EICR.
If there’s a cooker switch, it should have a “bullnose” to supply the cooker/whatever, which looks like a light switch with a blank cover on it (and a small gap at the bottom for the cable). A socket however is only rated to 13a. High amperage equipment is designed to be “hard wired” into its circuit rather than have a plug and socket.Because the cooker has its own circuit, it won’t trip anything else out. They may have had an electric over and a gas hob - and gas hobs need a socket to power the ignition spark.
Do you have any photos?
after a ridiculously long delay the letting agents response to our questions about any having used the cooker location successfully in the past and when it was wired and how was it wired they effectively shrugged their shoulders and threw the EICR at us.
looking at the attached I'm thinking there IS a cooker ring attached to a socket but i'm not sure if the protective device rating on the cooker line of 32 (a) is the max amps it will support (i.e. can I use a 32A cooker on that circuit or will it trip it if we're using all the things at christmas.
regardless it seems i'm stuck not being able to measure the space properly until we move in on 11/12 so i'll have less than 2 weeks to order and install a cooker before everything shuts up shop for christmas.
being able to shop for potential options would help.
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