Hi i have just bought a newbuild house in the north east of england. I have had an electrical problem with my downstairs sockets keep tripping the trip switch and rcd switch. I have traced this down to a live wire been sliced into by the electrician leaving the metal cage behind the socket fascia screws loose causing a small fire behind the socket when it has cut through the live wire. I am after some info on weather its acceptable for two earth wires in a socket to be ran through 1 sheathing drilled through one hole behind the socket. Does this break iee rules? Need some info before i play holy hell with persimmon homes. Regards Anthony
iee rules...? hmmm..
BS7671 is non-statutory.. just guidance for good practice...
so don't hold your breath on pursuing anything significant down this avenue.
Now herein lies your problem...
1/ Builders want to construct as many houses as possible for as little money as possible..
2/ Numerous trades are subcontracted out, further subcontractors squeezing every last penny out of the contract whilst reducing the build time to as short as possible...
3/ The sub contractors doing the electrical work probably have a gang of part skilled cable bashers supervised by one or two with a few electrical qualifications...
4/ The "Testing electrician" maybe with a few extra qualifications and a few extra years experience.. probably had to come and test and sign off a whole group of houses in one day...
5/ If he/she finds any snags or problems this slows down their progress and target for the day and possibly their pay??
6/ If the same people come back to re-check their own work.. they are unlikely to say their own work is poor!
7/ If a.n.other contractor who also works with the builder and knows the original electrical contractors comes back to recheck, they may be reluctant to give a poor image of either builders quality control or the other contractor as this may affect future work!!
8/ I certainly wouldn't go in all guns a blazing saying you have had a fire behind a socket..
TBH it looks to me more like a brief spark as wires shorted out..
But the fusebox did its job removing the power to isolate the fault.
9/ It is a sad fact of life that newbuild properties are built for speed and cost, almost any and every aspect of a property can have dodgy workmanship.. from plumbing / painting / carpentry / brickwork / window fitting / roofing / driveways / gardens / kitchens / bathrooms etc.. etc.. AND electric's..
a long snagging list is NOT uncommon!!
10/ you need to work out the best way to get remedial work or monetary compensation from the builder for you to put right the snags you have found...
But don't go burning your bridges making yourself unpopular in case you find other snags later that you then need to go back and open up further negotiations
11/ As has been suggested I think you need a thorough independent inspection of all outlets fittings and switches to verify they are all safe..
maybe half to one days labour for someone to come and check it all out..
12/ Although the work may be poor quality..
you are unlikely to get any fires or shocks as the fusebox should have RCD protection as well as overload protection and that should remove the power pretty darn quickly in the event of a fault.
13/ Don't forget that before going to the builder it may be best to decide what you actually want as a solution so you know what you are aiming for, rather than just having a who's to blame argument..
As Kerching often says...
you can only have two out of the three with "Good" "Quick" or "Cheap"
New build properties usually go for 2 & 3!!
:coffee