M
Megatyte
I'm sorry but I'm just not buying this. It's got to be a wind up.
Too many things wrong for it NOT to be deliberate.
A H
Too many things wrong for it NOT to be deliberate.
A H
Unfortunately mate it is strictly true. You have to kill someone these days to get action taken against you. In an ideal world yes the installer would be brought to book over this but we don't live in that worldHe will not be prosecuted for the standard of work
Not strictly true.
Forget part P just ring your local building dept, tell them the work you want to do, they will want copies of your qualifications and the electrical installation certificate an schedule of tests certificate which they keep.
90 posts and our OP still hasn't done anything about the situation.
Hi Tony,
It's not that I've not done anything but this thread is getting printed out by my cousin and she has wrote a letter and holding meeting with this idiot when she comes back from holiday. I am overwhelmed with the amount of replies that this thread has received and I will be updating as and when I receive any info.
Cheers
Sent from my GT-I9300 using Tapatalk 2
john, of course you can do this, but regardless of qualifications they will still want the application fee (£180+vat where I am).
That is true for a stand-alone bit of work but there is no additional cost if the project is already subject to Building Regulations paperwork with the council.
90% of my work is like that, maybe I'll bin my NAPIT membership and not bother about the other 10%.
That is disturbing... What is colloquially known as common sense should dictate that live exposed conductive parts should be covered never mind BS7671...
Burying T&E??? common...
and are the fittings even IP rated?
That said, please excuse my naivety but what is the problem with having the lights fed from a ring main (assuming the additional load would not take the circuit beyond max rated demand).
I have just done something similar to a new build house where they had run 6mm to a hob point that was going to feed an induction hob, but instead the owners fitted a gas hob and so there is 6mm cable on a 40am MCB to feed a tiny electrical spark... I have added a circuit that will feed a couple of electric heaters, a few lights and sockets.
I am a qualified electrician, but not a very practiced one (just qualified). and so am checking that I have not made an error that will have my work appearing on a new thread...
and why would an RCD not work?...exposed-conductive-parts?..yes?......a potential earth path?..yes?....seriously this so called sparky hasnt a clue or doesnt care even if he had it on a RCD it wouldnt work it needs a earth and special location
ok i have heard all this before !!!
many years i visited electricians for their assessments and they would show me photos or tell me so and so done this and that and yes if it was in front of me i would report it straigth away but when i tell the electricain to report it they say oh i dont want the bother
either dont complain or report it this what is shown is a life threatening example bit of rain little kid and electrics makes for a distaster
I assume you have altered the 40 amp circuit to a submain and installed a small DB supplying the final circuits to the sockets, heaters and lighting, therefore reducing cable csa appropriately. If not I would say not good practice. Hope this helps.
Well depending on what type of light fitting you have used you could contravene regulation 559.6.1.6 by exceeding the maximum of 16amp protective device advised for a lighting circuit.
Also how have you wired the accessories you say you fitted lights, heaters, sockets have you wired these looped in 6mm? or have you reduced the cable size?
I'll bet he didn't install that box...The only thing I can see done correctly about that install is the fact he actually pushed the boat out and used 2 screws to hold the patress box to the wall......