Hi Guys & gals,
I would just like to pick your brains and hear your thoughts on this one!!
Ive read alot about the old "VIR" cable and that it should all be replaced straight away, as it will have probably gone past its sell by date!!!
Ive also read that you should NOT touch it or even move it in any way, as this could cause the insulation to just fall off!!
Now, Ive actually had a bad experience with this stuff when I was just looking into some trunking...it had a mix of pvc singles and this VIR cable. Now I didnt actually move the VIR, I just brushed aside some of the singles, with the back of my hand and I must of disturbed the VIR cable enough that a faulty piece of insulation came off and it shorted on the trunking/conduit (on the locking nut from the conduit, where it enters into the trunking). Any way this gave me a brown stain in my boxers and I imedeately told the owner to get an EICR done asap!!! I pulled the old porcelain fuse protecting the VIR cable and told him I could not leave it live.
So I would like to know what you guys would do, if you were doing an EICR and you came across VIR cable, knowing you shouldn't really touch it????
Would you not test it and code it anyway??
Would you disconnect the circuit and inform the customer that you cant test it and you cant leave it in service knowing it is past its best??
Would you test it as normal and IF it tests ok (doubt full but.....), would you connect it back up??
I'm asking because I was at a fault yesterday. It was a faulty light fitting, but the cable feeding it was VIR cable and I didn't feel comfortable connecting a new light fitting to it, so I run a new feed from a near by lighting circuit (t&e PVC). There were various other circuits wired in VIR cable and I've adivised the customer to get an EICR done asap but they have to convince the landlord first (commercial premises). I will hopefully be doing the EICR and just wanted your thoughts on how to proceed with this stuff?
Thanks
Jay
I would just like to pick your brains and hear your thoughts on this one!!
Ive read alot about the old "VIR" cable and that it should all be replaced straight away, as it will have probably gone past its sell by date!!!
Ive also read that you should NOT touch it or even move it in any way, as this could cause the insulation to just fall off!!
Now, Ive actually had a bad experience with this stuff when I was just looking into some trunking...it had a mix of pvc singles and this VIR cable. Now I didnt actually move the VIR, I just brushed aside some of the singles, with the back of my hand and I must of disturbed the VIR cable enough that a faulty piece of insulation came off and it shorted on the trunking/conduit (on the locking nut from the conduit, where it enters into the trunking). Any way this gave me a brown stain in my boxers and I imedeately told the owner to get an EICR done asap!!! I pulled the old porcelain fuse protecting the VIR cable and told him I could not leave it live.
So I would like to know what you guys would do, if you were doing an EICR and you came across VIR cable, knowing you shouldn't really touch it????
Would you not test it and code it anyway??
Would you disconnect the circuit and inform the customer that you cant test it and you cant leave it in service knowing it is past its best??
Would you test it as normal and IF it tests ok (doubt full but.....), would you connect it back up??
I'm asking because I was at a fault yesterday. It was a faulty light fitting, but the cable feeding it was VIR cable and I didn't feel comfortable connecting a new light fitting to it, so I run a new feed from a near by lighting circuit (t&e PVC). There were various other circuits wired in VIR cable and I've adivised the customer to get an EICR done asap but they have to convince the landlord first (commercial premises). I will hopefully be doing the EICR and just wanted your thoughts on how to proceed with this stuff?
Thanks
Jay