Going to a job tomorrow where a plumber is renovating a house and is putting a shower in the bedroom. He has converted a bedroom cupboard to fit a cubicle. As far as I'm aware there isn't going to be a door to the cuboard just a glass cubicle door. I've got to fit cubicle light and fan, wire shower plus other jobs.
I noticed a socket in the bedroom about 1.5m from cubicle and the penny didn't drop until I sat down to work out job. I realise that this needs to removed/ moved, would a blank plate be sufficient? or change it to a fcu to allow something to be hardwired?
Has anyone had this before? Any ideas?
I suppose the best answer is to put a door on the cupboard and make the shower a seperate room but not sure that is the plan though...
Just an update, went back to do job before christmas. I told him all sockets in bedroom within 3m would have to be removed, there were 3 doubles, he didn't realise this and was then a bit worried as the house is for his elderly parents and his mother would want the sockets. He agreed to build a little partition wall with a door in corner of the room around the cubicle, thus making a seperate room.
I'm going back tomorow to second fix the lights, shower etc. I have a nagging doubt that the door will be there, as he said he was happy for me to note on the install cert about the new wall being built so me thinks it won't be there. How will a note about this on the cert stand up, or should i refuse to connect up shower until it is? fingers crossed the wall is there!!
As to the rcds and bonding it is a 16th edition rewire so i'm replacing the mcbs on the cu with rcbos where applicable, fortunately it's a crabtree starbreaker board and this is straight forward.
If no partition then either:-
1/ blank off the sockets and leave the original socket fronts with the customer...
Tell the customer to call you back when the partition is built, and it will be £25 to come back & re fix them.
2/ fix shower but do not supply or fit the MCB..
Tell the customer to call you back when the partition is built, and it will be £25 to come back & fit the MCB & final test.
If customer refuses to pay anymore then you have to decide whether to
a/ walk away form the job...
b/ carry the loss yourself...
If the customer chooses NOT to build the partition.....
and gets someone else to reconnect the socket fronts or the MCB that you leave disconnected...
then that is not your responsibility!!
But these options also assume you can get the customer to pay for the work so far?????
But then again as it was your fault in the begining....
as you say..
the penny didn't drop until I sat down to work out job. I realise that this needs to removed/ moved
I can fully understand a customer being a bit peeved when the "expert" employed to do the job didn't identify the full requirements at the initial visit.
Most customer I know don't like the ground rules being changed part way through a job!
opcorn