E

Ell4848

New kitchen will be installed. Do we need to rewire the kitchen? The fusebox we have is ancient and our electrician has recommended to rewire kitchen then have a consumer unit just for the kitchen electrics as he said things may trip because our consumer unit is old but my builder who covers all of this said we can change the main fusebox in the house and he's included first fix electrics in his quote


We are not changing too much when it comes to the electrics, some advice would be very much appreciated

We will be replacing the kitchen light fixture that is already there(ceiling) and replacing with something similar.

The washing machine will need a new socket installed ( double socket) and plumbing as its being moved completely to the opposite side of the kitchen where it is now

Fridge is staying in same location

The gas cooker will be moved approximately 50-60cm to the left of its current location and the new gas cooker will have an electric grill inside, the previous one was all gas (new cooker will have double gas oven with electric grill)

We would want to replace all socket covers currently there as well for aesthetics
Thank you in advance
 
The ancient fuse board will need upgrading before long. In fact the next bit of electrical work you have done will need it.
Putting a mini board just for the kitchen is kicking the can down the road.

Change the Fusebox for a nice new shiny consumer unit and the whole house will benefit from the safety snd other features afforded you.

I would question your choice of electrician if he’s scared to change a fuse board because it “things might trip”
 
Not seeing your kitchen lay out if the said
Spark recommendeds a rewire then I would go with that, separate consumer unit will be in order.
 
Not seeing your kitchen lay out if the said
Spark recommendeds a rewire then I would go with that separate consumer unit will be in order.
Thanks. I suggested this to our electrician and he suggested rewiring then have own fusebox just for kitchen.

He said if he changes the main fusebox it could trip what's in the kitchen? And because its a new kitchen he said we wouldn't want to go behind cupboard etc

Are you an electrician? What do you think. Would the new applicances and new socket trip?
 
Are you an electrician? What do you think. Would the new applicances and new socket trip?
Some times my head thinks I'm am
But my body don't think so, lol , post up a pic of the fuse box.
 
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With so little extra wiring , upgrading at the main board would seem the logical choice

Could end up with kitchen rewire and new main board or even extra sub -board, hard to say without a survey
 
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Are you an electrician? What do you think. Would the new applicances and new socket trip?
No. Why on earth would they? It will be new wiring in the kitchen, new appliances.
I think what your so-called electrician is saying is that existing faults in the old wiring may need attention if a new consumer unit is installed replacing the ancient fuse board.
Well, that is of course possible. But I’m sure that you wouldn’t want a dodgy connection in the old wiring sparking away and catching fire, would you.
And, as I said above, when the next project comes along - perhaps new bathroom lighting, or an additional socket - that will require RCD protection and you’ll need a new consumer unit at that time, and the existing installation will need testing and faults repaired anyway.
Now’s the time. Just do it right.
 
I expect he's thinking he doesn't want the can of worms that could be the rest of the house or that it's a lot easier for him to give you a firm price if he sticks to just pricing the new work and then separating the new from old with a separate consumer unit. Realistically you are probably better to change your consumer unit now as well but I do understand why he has said that.
 
No. Why on earth would they? It will be new wiring in the kitchen, new appliances.
I think what your so-called electrician is saying is that existing faults in the old wiring may need attention if a new consumer unit is installed replacing the ancient fuse board.
Well, that is of course possible. But I’m sure that you wouldn’t want a dodgy connection in the old wiring sparking away and catching fire, would you.
And, as I said above, when the next project comes along - perhaps new bathroom lighting, or an additional socket - that will require RCD protection and you’ll need a new consumer unit at that time, and the existing installation will need testing and faults repaired anyway.
Now’s the time. Just do it right.
Do you recommend changing the main fuse board then or putting one in just for the kitchen? He recommended rewiring the kitchen. Don't know what to do obviously im new to this i want to keep costs down but I want the safest option where there shouldn't be problems in the future
As the electrician said, we don't want to be going behind cupboards. The builder has included 1st fix plumbing and electrics do you know what this covers??

Thank you
 
I expect he's thinking he doesn't want the can of worms that could be the rest of the house or that it's a lot easier for him to give you a firm price if he sticks to just pricing the new work and then separating the new from old with a separate consumer unit. Realistically you are probably better to change your consumer unit now as well but I do understand why he has said that.
Definitely , there's those 2 sides to it
 
wary of builder doing any work ekectrical. apart from the fact that it could be done by labourets on low wages, there is the problem that when an electrician does the 2nd fix and comes to test, there will be builder's work that he cannot say he has done himself and many will not certify or copmply with part pee.
 
wary of builder doing any work ekectrical. apart from the fact that it could be done by labourets on low wages, there is the problem that when an electrician does the 2nd fix and comes to test, there will be builder's work that he cannot say he has done himself and many will not certify or copmply with part pee.
Its a big building firm. I will clarify they are using registered electricians pretty sure they are but i will clarify its important.
 
Am I going with the main fusebox change or kitchen fusebox with rewiring?

Touch wood our electrics are old but they are good and served us well. No issues

The builder uses a NICEIC registered electrician so can do 1st phase and second phase

My electrician on the other hand said he thinks it needs a full rewire in the kitchen. He changed a socket at our house last year and remembered the condition based on those plug cables.

What do you think?
 
Builders are notorious for cutting corners. They will just joint cables and leave them in the wall…. It’ll work, and will probably test ok, but they are on a price and will do things quickly. NICEIC or not.

If your own electrician recommends a rewire, I’d get him to do it all.

As asked above, can we get a photo of the the fuse board. We can then guesstimate the age of the installation. (The fuse board and wiring will be of the same age)

Any alteration to existing circuits, be it lighting or power will require rcd protection.
 
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Get an EICR done on the house to see if any faults exist first...as you could end up with a full house rewire
 
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To me this sounds like the condition of the wiring and existing fusebox may all be in need of attention.
The electrician working for the builders doing the kitchen work simply wants to make sure that all of the new work in the kitchen is up to scratch, and by fitting a separate new board for the kitchen and his new work, leaves a clear demarcation line between what he has done, and the existing.
It is sometimes not as simple as 'just changing the main board' if the existing wiring in the rest of the house is below par. Yes you have experienced no problems to date, but very often the faults detected by thorough inspection and testing never reveal themselves to the end user until a fault occurs and safety systems do not work as intended.
In essence they are both right, but to change the main board could lead to the need to partially or wholely rewire the rest of the house, not just the kitchen.
If you really want to make an informed decision, then the best way is to pay for an electrician to carry out an EICR on the existing wiring. You would then have the information needed to make a decision on the best way to proceed.
 
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To me this sounds like the condition of the wiring and existing fusebox may all be in need of attention.
The electrician working for the builders doing the kitchen work simply wants to make sure that all of the new work in the kitchen is up to scratch, and by fitting a separate new board for the kitchen and his new work, leaves a clear demarcation line between what he has done, and the existing.
It is sometimes not as simple as 'just changing the main board' if the existing wiring in the rest of the house is below par. Yes you have experienced no problems to date, but very often the faults detected by thorough inspection and testing never reveal themselves to the end user until a fault occurs and safety systems do not work as intended.
In essence they are both right, but to change the main board could lead to the need to partially or wholely rewire the rest of the house, not just the kitchen.
If you really want to make an informed decision, then the best way is to pay for an electrician to carry out an EICR on the existing wiring. You would then have the information needed to make a decision on the best way to proceed.
It's my electrician that want to do the rewiring with separate fusebox

However builder and his company they can change the main fusebox and do 1st and 2nd phase electrics. I've also asked for the gas and electric quotes when completed

I've attached the fusebox we have now. It's over 25 years old

I cant open anything up to see inside as it's very high up and the stools I have to look further cannot access until tomorrow

Hope that helps

Thank you
 

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25 year old? Try nearer 50.

Same as what was in my parents house, and its the same age as me....
So expect the wiring to be 50 years old as well, and any original accessories.
 
The thing is, 50 year old wiring can often test out perfectly if it hasn't been messed with over the years , but I'd certainly recommend a thorough test and inspection, there are certain faults that rewirable fuses will never react to whereas a new RCBO unit would be tripping constantly. But any decent electrician will carry out thorough testing as part of the Consumer Unit upgrade, it's necessary for the certification.
 
The only way any of us on here could be certain of giving the best advice would be by being 'on site' and having a proper look including a few basic tests. And even then different electricians would disagree on their idea of the best way forward.
 
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Never ever let a builder do your electrics. Not only are they not qualified but they charge more than necessary a lot of the time.

Get an electrician to do it.
 
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Get the existing fuse board replaced. Doesn't look like there will be many circuits in your existing board so it shouldn't take very long to swap out.

This will enable the cabling throughout the house to be better protected. Things may begin to trip but only if there are faults in your installation and if there are, you'd much rather know they're there and have them sorted wouldn't you?
 
The thing is, 50 year old wiring can often test out perfectly if it hasn't been messed with over the years , but I'd certainly recommend a thorough test and inspection, there are certain faults that rewirable fuses will never react to whereas a new RCBO unit would be tripping constantly. But any decent electrician will carry out thorough testing as part of the Consumer Unit upgrade, it's necessary for the certification.
That's what the electrician said. A new mains fusebox may trip everything amd he is suggesting a rewire in the kitchen with a consumer unit just for the kitchen
He said he can change the main consumer unit but to avoid going under new units etc its best to rewire kitchen
Thoughts?
 
That's what the electrician said. A new mains fusebox may trip everything amd he is suggesting a rewire in the kitchen with a consumer unit just for the kitchen
He said he can change the main consumer unit but to avoid going under new units etc its best to rewire kitchen
Thoughts?
That can be an ok way of doing it

Submain ,sub-board and rewire in kitchen only

It leaves the rest of the house and main board as a separate job

There's no single right answer and there's a few variables subject to site survey
 
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That's what the electrician said. A new mains fusebox may trip everything amd he is suggesting a rewire in the kitchen with a consumer unit just for the kitchen
He said he can change the main consumer unit but to avoid going under new units etc its best to rewire kitchen
Thoughts?
I think you’re electrician is advising the most sensible thing here and saying to install a new ring main to kitchen to separate his work from any existing wiring/circuits. If you gave him the go ahead to do an EICR prior to the work he could then determine the condition of the existing electrics which by the looks of your photos seems pretty outdated, if your on the cautious side with costs I can see why you’re electrician is suggesting seperate consumer to cover himself for the kitchen works.
 
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I think you’re electrician is advising the most sensible thing here and saying to install a new ring main to kitchen to separate his work from any existing wiring/circuits. If you gave him the go ahead to do an EICR prior to the work he could then determine the condition of the existing electrics which by the looks of your photos seems pretty outdated, if your on the cautious side with costs I can see why you’re electrician is suggesting seperate consumer to cover himself for the kitchen works.
Also the builder uses a certified electrician which will include 1st fix electrics is that rewiring,,??
 
Also the builder uses a certified electrician which will include 1st fix electrics is that rewiring,,??
Ya pretty much
 
So first fix and new main consumer unit should be ok?
youhave 2 distinct issues here.

1.kitchen needs new circuits and can be independent of the rest of the house ( except for it's feed from the main CU).
2. the main CU needs updating , the existing wiring checked and any faults recified. this could be a simple few repairs or a complete rewire, dependeing in the conditionof the wiring, 50 years is average lifespan for an installation but you could find that the wiring is good for another 50.

above should be determined by a thorough inspection and test: then you will have a better idea of what is required. main thing is if you are going for rewiring, do it before decorating.
 
has above from my master , i would get independent spark in from the builders one. so if there is any shouting to do it will not be the builder .
 
builder may be genuine and has a registered spark on hand. not all builders are rogues. i've worked with some good, some bad.
 
But the first fix in the kitchen is rewiring isn't it. Plus we are changing the main consumer unit.

If there is another issue with the electrics it wouldn't be the kitchen right? First fix is before they start decorating
 
builder may be genuine and has a registered spark on hand. not all builders are rogues. i've worked with some good, some bad.
He is. They are a big firm and do lots of extensive building work, extensions, full refurbishments, loft conversions
They do big jobs. Also he sent me a hole list of clients he's completed work with in the past 12 months with their email number and full address for reference purposes. I happen to know a couple
 
builder may be genuine and has a registered spark on hand. not all builders are rogues. i've worked with some good, some bad
i bet some were ugly . lol.
 

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New kitchen does it need own fusebox or change just the mains fusebox?
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