Think I did this once before but thought it worth a reprise.
When contracting to various organisations , you can find yourself working to a spec. you are not familiar with . Wondering who else has found such things.
Examples:-
(1)
A local hospital board insisted upon steel conduit with "Hospital" saddles , and flanged couplers c/with full length heavy guage brass bush, a lead ( the metal) washer and a serrated washer.
Hospital saddles stand off nearly 1/2" to stop gunge collecting behind the tube , fair enough but those couplers were really OTT.
(2)
Did a lot of work for British Gas some years ago. In their switch rooms , you look at the SWAs all made off in a panel in the usual way ......... then 6" above the gland , a band of PVC is cut out of each cable and a copper strip is clamped onto the armouring all the way across.
We didn't do it with our cables TBH !
(3)
A local authority adacent to B,ham new housing site specified that 3 plate wiring (lives looping at lights) was banned .
The masionettes on the site were to be done in steel conduit (Believe it or not!) ( you couldn't get a full length into the room.)
The tails between the meter and the consumer unit , about 4 mtrs away, to be contained in , FLUSH , 35mm STEEL conduit .
(4)
B,ham City Council insisted (may still do) on the metal sheathing (capping) on housing jobs being earthed.
(5)
A consulting firm had us bonding that flimsy silver foil that covers the thick expanded lagging in boiler rooms . We asked how they expected us to do it.......... "With a self tapper and a 4mm jumper with crimp lugs "
To get the picture........think trying to attach a bonding cable with a self tapper to Baco-Foil.
Just thinking back!
When contracting to various organisations , you can find yourself working to a spec. you are not familiar with . Wondering who else has found such things.
Examples:-
(1)
A local hospital board insisted upon steel conduit with "Hospital" saddles , and flanged couplers c/with full length heavy guage brass bush, a lead ( the metal) washer and a serrated washer.
Hospital saddles stand off nearly 1/2" to stop gunge collecting behind the tube , fair enough but those couplers were really OTT.
(2)
Did a lot of work for British Gas some years ago. In their switch rooms , you look at the SWAs all made off in a panel in the usual way ......... then 6" above the gland , a band of PVC is cut out of each cable and a copper strip is clamped onto the armouring all the way across.
We didn't do it with our cables TBH !
(3)
A local authority adacent to B,ham new housing site specified that 3 plate wiring (lives looping at lights) was banned .
The masionettes on the site were to be done in steel conduit (Believe it or not!) ( you couldn't get a full length into the room.)
The tails between the meter and the consumer unit , about 4 mtrs away, to be contained in , FLUSH , 35mm STEEL conduit .
(4)
B,ham City Council insisted (may still do) on the metal sheathing (capping) on housing jobs being earthed.
(5)
A consulting firm had us bonding that flimsy silver foil that covers the thick expanded lagging in boiler rooms . We asked how they expected us to do it.......... "With a self tapper and a 4mm jumper with crimp lugs "
To get the picture........think trying to attach a bonding cable with a self tapper to Baco-Foil.
Just thinking back!
Last edited by a moderator: