How to set up a fuse box in a French home
Columnist Nick Inman charts the ups and downs of renovating an old French farmhouse
The standard box to hold circuit breakers is made of relatively flimsy plastic
Nick Inman
I am an incorrigible Francophile in most things, but there are a very few times when I draw the line. For example, when it comes to plastic accessories for electricity.
Some time ago, I ran two circuits from the main consumer unit to the barn: one for the sockets and one for the lights.
It seemed a good idea to isolate these two outbuilding circuits with a secondary fuse box so that I did not have to walk through the house each time I wanted to switch them off.
I rigged up a temporary fix and it was a good two years before I got round to making it permanent.
What I needed was a mini-consumer unit in the corner of the boiler room, which I could use to turn one or both circuits on or off.
For this I needed a box to contain my miniature circuit breakers or disjoncteurs.
The normal way of doing this in France is to buy un tableau or coffret électrique – a simple plastic box with a rack inside on which to clip the circuit breakers.
These boxes come in different sizes according to the modules (circuit breakers) they hold.
I only needed two switches but it seemed sensible to get a box with space for four to allow for future adaptations of the system.
The trouble is that the standard box to hold circuit breakers is made of flimsy plastic. I bought one of these, thinking that what was good enough for the majority of French DIY-ers must be good enough for me.
I did my best to rig it up but I was highly dissatisfied with the result.
This was because it had two drawbacks that weighed on my mind.
One was that when I drilled holes in the top of the thin plastic to pass the cables through, the result looked decidedly cack-handed.
The other, more serious, problem was a lack of space inside the box.
I had 11 wires to deal with (four live, four neutral and three earths) and I could not find a way to guide them all into their respective terminals and still be able to push the cover snugly back into its place. The result was not something I felt proud of.
There had to be a better way, I thought, and I went shopping in various DIY stores, big and small, to see if I could find a decent satellite consumer unit.
There are, I discovered, better tableaux around. They are weatherproof, for outdoor use, and while I was not too worried about keeping water out, I did want something that felt solid.
The big electric component brands make four-module tableaux but they are expensive.
I almost went for one of these but then, on my last shopping trip, I found an unbranded box in Brico E.Leclerc for under €13. (They are also available online; search for coffret électrique 4 modules).
The main part of the box is screwed to the wall in four places. Best of all, it has a sturdy metal DIN rail – the shaped medal bar onto which you clip your circuit breakers.
The lid of the box fits neatly into place with four more screws and has a transparent door, which can be opened and closed.
Things were looking great but there remained one finishing touch.
It always bothers me when wires do not look neat running through a jagged hole drilled through plastic.
Browsing online I found that there are some nifty little fittings to disguise the passageway: presse-étoupes (cable glands).
You have to assemble them in the right order – don’t forget to slide the sheath over the cable before you push the cable into the fuse box – and when you do the result is professional in the extreme.