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I am glad the forum was able to guide you in the right direction to get it resolved and I hope your exchange of contracts happened today.
C3 - if it conforms to original install but not to current, so is advisary. like a plastic consumer unit.
U is 230V also.
Why should it be amended to "Satisfactory"? It's not a certificate but a report - it shouldn't be amended but simply a statement of the facts as they presented themselves at the time of the inspection. I would not amend an EICR to read "satisfactory" later but would merely certify whatever remedial works I had carried out.So do we take it the EICR has now been ammended to "satisfactory" with just a few C3's? If so that's the result you want.
Well impressed at the DNO turning out that quick. I guess he reported it to them as a "dangerous condition" that's normally the only way to get them out so quick.
My NICEIC Area Engineer is also adament that DNO equipment is to be commented upon as per the inspection schedule. It's in black and white on the inspection schedule after all.
its also in black and white in 110.2 (i) that its not part of 7671
its also in black and white in 110.2 (i) that its not part of 7671
i would comment, and if it was dangerous call DNO, but i wouldnt give an unsatisfactory report for it. bit like saying its unsatisfactory because the front door is broken
Unless the supply head is declared specifically out of scope...which rather defeats the object.
The Electrical Safety First best practice guide 4 on EICR coding specifically lists one of the example uses of FI as flagging up deficiency in the network operator's supply.
You can have a conversation about what may or may not constitute an FI, but the point that you can and where appropriate should FI the network operator's supply seems completely clear to me.
Applying common sense, you're not doing a very good report if the DNO supply has an issue that could render the installation dangerous and you sign it off Satisfactory, are you? Unless the supply head is declared specifically out of scope...which rather defeats the object.
i wouldnt give an unsatisfactory report for it.
what would be the point in writing an unsatisfactory report? or maybe you would rather give an unsatisfactory report then charge to go back look at the repair and issue a satisfactory one?
it does not render the instatiion covered by 7671 unsafe
it is declared out of scope. see post 127...
Please explain then why best practice guide 4 tells you to code it FI where appropriate then, if it's outwith the scope of the report.
I don't agree. N/A is correct for a single phase supply.
We need to be clear in our thinking here. There are two entirely separate points :-
1. Is the network operator supply within the scope of the report in terms of being able to FI?
2. If so, is a suspected possible fused neutral in the supply head legitimate FI?
I'm open to having a discussion about 2. but it's difficult to see any merit in discussing 1. when BPG4 categorically answers it Yes. I'm not likely to be persuaded that, rather than code based on BPG4, I should code based on the word of some bloke on the Internet who says BPG4 is part of an NICEIC conspiracy.
Eggsactly. So you either stand on ceremony clutching BS7671 saying "Not in scope!" and pretend you can't see something that might reasonably bring scope for danger, or you consider your duty of care in terms of a holistic approach to the safety of the installation (and maybe ask yourself if you fancy explaining in court in front of the grieving relatives why you didn't FI the thing that BPG4 arguably told you to report).
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