I had another electrician look at the problem last week when the flat was empty. This is what he reported:-
Carried out a fault find to the circuits as requested to find the location of the break in the ring main, we removed every socket in the kitchen area where the circuit is for ad inspected ever fuse spur to make sure the wiring configuration was correct, which it was. To shared load balancing we have now installed what was the ring main when previously tested by someone else onto x2 20amp MCBs giving the circuit a total of 40amps in the kitchen which is more than sufficient. We are led to believe that the previous ring readings were incorrect.
If I understand what he is saying is there was no break in the ring circuit and the guy doing the EICR made a mistake. The ring now has a 20A MCB at either end. Does this sound right?
You cannot have a ring with two 20A MCB's at each end..
A ring circuit is ALWAYS supplied from the same MCB/RCBO/FUSE etc..
If they have opened up every accessory and discovered it is actually two radial circuits then yes they could be put onto two 20A MCBs.. But the wording is a bit vague..?
Very simple continuity tests can quickly confirm the exact order that all sockets on a circuit are connected..
All sockets on the ring would have at least two cables, (possibly three if there is a spur off the ring at that point).
If you then find a socket with only one cable, it is either the end of a spur off a ring... or the end of a radial circuit..
If there is a broken ring you will either find a loose cable termination at one accessory or find two sockets with cables that appear to go no-where that you cannot find the other end to?
a 20A radial circuit can be sufficient for many rooms in a typical domestic property; e.g. lounge, dining, bedrooms, study... But kitchens / utilities are the areas where I would expect a 32A ring is the best design solution..
There is nothing within BS7671 to say that a kitchen/utility cannot have sockets supplied from radial circuits... However generally kitchens/utilities and radials are not good compatible bed-fellows in my opinion... as these are the rooms where the majority of higher power appliances are used... and you are just asking for a potential relationship breakdown with problems later on!!
Whilst the hob/oven are probably off a separate "Cooker circuit" you have no control if too many other appliances are using sockets on the same radial.. e.g. Kettle / Toaster / Microwave / Washing machine / Bread machine / Iron / Sandwich toaster / Coffee machine / etc.. etc.. which various permutations of, could cause issues..!
It is possible that the electrician has now rectified an error of two 2.5mm radial branches previously sharing a 32A MCB.. and now it is split onto two 20A MCB's.. But not 100% sure from the description in your quoted report text??
Personally If I had been asked to undertake this work I would have provided a sketch layout of rough socket positions on an approximate room plan layout with simple "join the dots" type lines showing the order that the various sockets / accessories are connected... and/or where any ring break / radial circuits end.
e.g. a current job (kitchen refurb), which is being ripped out tomorrow and Thursday I will be visiting to amend wiring ready for fitters to commence on Friday.. But a couple of weeks back I did a few preliminary investigations so I know exactly how the current circuit is wired..
Which also identified a spur off a spur on the island unit to be resolved.. My blue numbers in circles are the number of cables at that accessory and red numbers are earth loop impedance values, (its a TT installation hence higher earth loop values).
This level of testing, investigation, identification, of a circuits composition is the most basic and simple tasks for a competent electrician to perform...
I cannot see how anyone could confuse a "broken ring" with two "radials"??
Unless someone is actually incompetent??