With the lack of information given it is impossible to reach any kind of informed conclusion.

As a spark, surely you know the reasons why an RCD might be required just as well as the rest of us??
 
HI TQ thanks for the reply, I would like to point out before continuing that I always make a point of protecting them, however I have recently been to installs where they are not protected and Ive been trying to find out weather this is a requirement or not. And having my head in the bgb and brb for a while, I keep coming back to regulation 411.3.3 which talks about sockets, however as you know not all cooker circuits consist of a socket. so please can someone give me a difinitave reply with the correect regulation as I am greatly interested in the response.
Thanks
 
I keep coming back to regulation 411.3.3 which talks about sockets, however as you know not all cooker circuits consist of a socket. so please can someone give me a difinitave reply with the correect regulation as I am greatly interested in the response.
Thanks

see reg. 522.6.6 and 522.6.7
 
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Sorry I should have made it clearer,

the reference was taken from the BRB

Not many cables in a domestic setting are suitably mechanically protected, and even fewer at a depth greater than 50mm, so to all intents and purposes require 30mA RCD protection since the 17th Ed.

Edit: I do have the BGB, but have not finished looking through it all yet.
 
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[/QUOTE]Not many cables in a domestic setting are suitably mechanically protected, and even fewer at a depth greater than 50mm, so to all intents and purposes require 30mA RCD protection since the 17th Ed.[/QUOTE]

Yea and thats what was blowing my mind, however some people just want to do the minimum to satisfy regulations, I havew been going to carry out some PIRs for this one letting agent in particular, and majority of properties are getting the same problem, currently I'm putting a code 3 against them all, it seems like the same 'electrician' has been doing installs for these guys. When Ive asked for previous records all i get are periodics, yet most of the cooker circuits are not more than 3 years old, all new colours, even new split board cu's etc.
Thats the reason I decided to look through regs, and also post here. To see if there was a definitive regulation, as it is I will continue with code 3's and come new year c3 should suffice.
Thanks for all your help.
 
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I agree about c3, the reason why I have been giving them code 3s is because unless u open up the wall and check you are unable to find out if they are i) more than 50mm deep, ii) mechanically protected, etc.... therefore requiring further investigation.

I didnt think it to be as serious as a code 2, but you may be right in some circumstances.

once again thanks man, I'm glad you decided to help, otherwise I would still be flicking through the pages of the holy book.
 

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rcd or not to rcd, that is the question
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