Questions about Gas...
 

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[Closed] Questions about Gas and Electric cookers

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I need a new cooker. I have a gas one but want to move to electric.
Is it easy to disconect the gas myself or do i need a Corgi person also
is it easy to connect a electric cooker myself or are wires and hospitals involved.

Thank you 🙂


 
Posted : 29/12/2015 6:07 pm
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Is it easy to disconect the gas myself

😯

If you have to ask...


 
Posted : 29/12/2015 6:36 pm
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It's a cakewalk.
What's the worst that could happen?


 
Posted : 29/12/2015 6:38 pm
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So do i just turn the handle off at the grey gas thingy and disconnect the cooker? Do i need to pull the hose off or do i just tape it up.

Thank you


 
Posted : 29/12/2015 6:50 pm
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If it's a bayonet type fitting you can do it, if not get someone corgi registered.
Have a look at some how to youtube videos to see what they look like.

(Disclaimer- I am not an expert)


 
Posted : 29/12/2015 6:54 pm
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Get someone in.


 
Posted : 29/12/2015 7:01 pm
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Don't do it, electric hobs are rubbish.

Also, it sounds like you might blow your house up.


 
Posted : 29/12/2015 7:08 pm
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Mine was just a push and rotate to release bayonet fitting, self sealing and with a lever just to be sure. I think if you remove the cooker permanently you just fit a blanking plug with gas PTFE tape (not the white stuff) to be safe.

I didn't give it a second thought as I'd moved the cooker several times whilst decorating, its not rocket science 🙂 If you trust yourself to connect a patio heater/BBQ, and can smell, and use a water soap solution to check for bubbles, why would you need a gas engineer?

(I wouldn't leave any sort of hose on the fitting, it should be blanked off at the rigid pipework)


 
Posted : 29/12/2015 7:09 pm
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Don't do it, electric hobs are rubbish.

+1.
Having just gone from electric to gas, I have no idea why anyone would prefer an electric hob.
Personally I wouldn't touch it. What if the valve doesn't hold and you disconnect it?


 
Posted : 29/12/2015 7:12 pm
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Find the gas valve by the meter just in case?


 
Posted : 29/12/2015 7:18 pm
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Our induction hob is wonderful when compared to any other electric hob i've ever used. I was firmly in the "Gas" camp until using this.


 
Posted : 29/12/2015 7:18 pm
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Parent's recently got a new induction hob. I've got a gas hob and still prefer it to the induction, although the induction is better than other electric hobs I've used before.

As others have said both gas and electric are fairly easy to do yourself. But, please don't take offence, you don't appear to be that clued up on it. For example do you have the correct rated feed for a new electric hob? I'd suggest paying for a professional to do it rather than bodging it and something horrible going wrong.


 
Posted : 29/12/2015 7:25 pm
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Induction is the way to go - powerful and controllable and they have a wipe clean surface.

The only downside is that you might need to run an extra circuit from the consumer unit in order to handle the load, which adds to the cost.


 
Posted : 29/12/2015 8:00 pm
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Curry's included free connection for our leccy one. And he did a proper test of all the sockets while he was on.


 
Posted : 29/12/2015 8:21 pm
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Check you have the correct power supply to support an electric cooker first. We had to have a gas hob and electric ovens on ours as the supply wasn't large enough when we put a new kitchen in and would have meant a larger cable from one end of the house to the fuseboard at the other and a new fuseboard. I chose the easier option !


 
Posted : 29/12/2015 8:28 pm
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I prefer gas ... turbo gas that is for wok.


 
Posted : 29/12/2015 8:31 pm
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Thanks chaps. I think i will let a grown up disconnect the cooker (don't want to talk about it) 😳

My washing machine has decided to go into the light and keeps on tripping my fuse box and has a strange electrical burning smell 🙁

Looking online at connection and removal of both, Currys charge £70 cooker connection 😯


 
Posted : 29/12/2015 9:32 pm
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Gas costs a lot less for an equivalent unit of energy than electricity, there will be an efficiency loss but not sufficient to make up the price differential.


 
Posted : 29/12/2015 9:58 pm
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No idea why someone would like to cook on electric rather than gas....


 
Posted : 29/12/2015 10:04 pm
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My gas cooker frightens the 'cow droppings' out of me. Those flames that you see on North Sea Oil Rigs can only dream of being like my cooker.

It also has 666 in it's serial number 🙁


 
Posted : 29/12/2015 10:08 pm
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Whomever you get to disconnect the gas oven make sure they are 'Gas Safe' registered, this replaced 'Corgi' in 2009 and will ensure they are up to date with legislation and are currently valid to carry out the work


 
Posted : 29/12/2015 10:10 pm
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Why not replace the broken bits of the gas cooker then?
I had to cook on electric for a couple of years after our last move. Then it took months to sort a gas hob (less than 0.5% of houses here have gas, not much call for gas hobs) was bloody horrible using electric.
Induction is ok, apparently.


 
Posted : 30/12/2015 8:54 am
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No idea why someone would like to cook on electric rather than gas....

The current wife cant smell gas, only mine, apparently, so we wanted to avoid the risk of blowing the house up by going electric and also a ceramic hob is much easier to keep clean.


 
Posted : 30/12/2015 9:21 am
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Our new house has an induction hob and it's fantastic. It boils water faster than the electric kettle, so we now have a nice cooker top kettle. Had gas before, but never used a conventional electric hob.


 
Posted : 30/12/2015 10:40 am
 br
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[i]Looking online at connection and removal of both, Currys charge £70 cooker connection [/i]

No doubt to cover the time for when they connect up the cooker and your fusebox 'blows', and you haven't let on that it also does that with your washing machine... 🙄


 
Posted : 30/12/2015 11:09 am
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No idea why someone would like to cook on electric rather than gas....

Nice and easy to clean electric hobs, plus they can simmer nicely unlike our gas one 🙁


 
Posted : 30/12/2015 11:13 am
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Wait! I just found the low flame adjuster screw! I can simmer!


 
Posted : 30/12/2015 12:37 pm
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b r - Member

Looking online at connection and removal of both, Currys charge £70 cooker connection

No doubt to cover the time for when they connect up the cooker and your fusebox 'blows', and you haven't let on that it also does that with your washing machine...

[b]?MEOW![/b]
??


 
Posted : 30/12/2015 2:44 pm

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