Stop guessing what can run at the same time.
Enter must-run loads, heaters, dryers, fans or portable AC against confirmed circuit groups. The planner keeps the base load visible and moves cycling loads into separate time blocks when the warning point is reached.
Use confirmed circuits only.
A schedule is only useful if the socket groups are known. If the group is unknown, map the sockets first or ask a competent person before spreading temporary equipment around the building.
Plan what runs together, what cycles, and what waits.
Use confirmed circuit groups from the mapping helper. Must-run items stay in the base load; other kit is staggered when it would push a circuit past the planning warning point.
Not sure which sockets share?
Use the circuit mapping helper before assuming two sockets can carry separate loads.
Lead or route concern?
Collect a guided evidence pack for rating labels, plug/socket view and cable-route red flags.
Need supplier wording?
Paste the schedule result into the temporary hire brief builder so the supplier sees the load numbers.