Originally Posted by
thatirwinfella
you don't neccessarily need to get two more centameters.
If the sparky who originally wired the board bothered to bring three phases in, they may be balanced reasonably equally, eg fairly equal maximum demands. Just using one centameter would give an indication per phase, and you could multiply by three to get a rough idea of the total amps being drawn. If you were to purchase the centameters to have ready for the sparky, get him to measure the current drawn per phase and if they are roughly equal, only install one, then get a refund on the spare units.
alternatively, a three phase centmeter may be available, with a single display, three current transformers [the coil which goes around the conductors] and a switch to choose which phase the display will show the current for. This may be cheaper [or more convenient space wise] then two more units.
I'd recommend a major board upgrade if any renovations are to be done in the future. It probably wouldn't be too hard to terminate the existing circuits to terminal strips [if ther isn't much length spare] in an existing cabinet, then run them through breakers and rcds in a vertical mounted board adjacent.
An as others have said, this is a sub par installation. I'm an apprentice, and I would be disppointed if my work looked like.