kernow1
Junior Member
- Joined
- Sep 29, 2009
- Messages
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I've recently been asked to do some work on a house which the customer has recently bought and moved into (10 days ago).
When I went round to check the place out I noticed that the main CU had been wired with the upstairs lighting and ring main circuits both wired into the same 32A MCB. I can't see why, as the ground floor equivalents are separately wired into a 6A and 32A respectively and there are 2 spare ways available.
Anyway, to continue, I then checked out the downlights in the 'refurbished' kitchen. They are 230v 50W halogens which have been fitted with no smoke hoods (they aren't fire rated), and the one I took out had been placed where a joist had run, so the guy just used the hole-saw to remove half the offending joist and placed a thin sheet of foil over the lamp unit. I only checked the one.
Lastly,(but I'm sure not least) the cooker and ceramic hob had been moved to the opposite end of the kitchen, some 5 metres away. The control switch has been left in situ and the, what looks to be a 4mm T&E, cable has been run around behind the units on the floor as is(ie no trunking etc.). The hob and cooker wiring have been joined with a choc-block and left loose covered in insulating tape, but concealed behind the oven on the floor.
I'm fairly confident that all of the above constitute a breach of the 17th Edition Regs. But what would be the best way to approach this situation? I need the work but am acutely aware that if I start work on the system I automatically become legally responsible for all the cr*p that has been installed. (Incidentally, the CU has the fitters company name on it with the date as 03/03/2010.)
I am Part P and 17th Edition qualified, but not a Scheme member yet. What is the best thing to do here? I'm worried that other horrors exist that I haven't discovered yet.
The customer is an older guy who has no clue about house-buying etc; and therefore did not get an electrical check before purchase (I know, I know). To be fair it all looked fairly kosher to the untrained eye. I've suggested that he asks his Solicitor to approach the Seller's brief to obtain the certificates that should have been provided..........but I'm not holding my breath !!
Does anyone know if the local BCO would pursue this for him, as the work is all notifiable and should therefore have been registered?
Any advice would be much appreciated.
When I went round to check the place out I noticed that the main CU had been wired with the upstairs lighting and ring main circuits both wired into the same 32A MCB. I can't see why, as the ground floor equivalents are separately wired into a 6A and 32A respectively and there are 2 spare ways available.
Anyway, to continue, I then checked out the downlights in the 'refurbished' kitchen. They are 230v 50W halogens which have been fitted with no smoke hoods (they aren't fire rated), and the one I took out had been placed where a joist had run, so the guy just used the hole-saw to remove half the offending joist and placed a thin sheet of foil over the lamp unit. I only checked the one.
Lastly,(but I'm sure not least) the cooker and ceramic hob had been moved to the opposite end of the kitchen, some 5 metres away. The control switch has been left in situ and the, what looks to be a 4mm T&E, cable has been run around behind the units on the floor as is(ie no trunking etc.). The hob and cooker wiring have been joined with a choc-block and left loose covered in insulating tape, but concealed behind the oven on the floor.
I'm fairly confident that all of the above constitute a breach of the 17th Edition Regs. But what would be the best way to approach this situation? I need the work but am acutely aware that if I start work on the system I automatically become legally responsible for all the cr*p that has been installed. (Incidentally, the CU has the fitters company name on it with the date as 03/03/2010.)
I am Part P and 17th Edition qualified, but not a Scheme member yet. What is the best thing to do here? I'm worried that other horrors exist that I haven't discovered yet.
The customer is an older guy who has no clue about house-buying etc; and therefore did not get an electrical check before purchase (I know, I know). To be fair it all looked fairly kosher to the untrained eye. I've suggested that he asks his Solicitor to approach the Seller's brief to obtain the certificates that should have been provided..........but I'm not holding my breath !!
Does anyone know if the local BCO would pursue this for him, as the work is all notifiable and should therefore have been registered?
Any advice would be much appreciated.