Discuss C3s putting you in harms way ?? in the Periodic Inspection Reporting & Certification area at ElectriciansForums.net

I try to take the balanced view, that if you NEED a book to decide for you what code to record, then you shouldn't be allowed to do inspection and testing, as you obviously don't yet have the necessary experience. On the other hand, it's occasionally helpful to look at such a book if there's a particularly unusual situation, as no one person has come across EVERY possible scenario.

In my opinion of course.
I have been driving for over forty years. When I had to change to summer time on the clock in my nice modern car. Like most men I felt I had enough experience to do so without searching through a 90 page users manual. Alas!! after half an hour of cursing and cussing I succumbed. And arriving at menu option 6 setting 22, managed to get the bloody time right. So much for experience and not needing books ??.
 
You keep promoting these gospels according to the CPS's in such a way that you must be getting commission on sales
[sigh]Where?[/sigh]

You have guides that are produced by 2 organisations which over recent years it has become quite clear that they are vying with each other to be top dog it is a pity they don't put as much effort into raising the standards of training from the gutter level they have pushed the industry into
Couldn't agree more - I think that NICEIC particularly acted shamefully when they (AFAIR) single-handedly invented the 5DW DI category.

BUT

Consider the official position of the schemes. And the official version of the back-story.

When the government sought to improve the safety of electrical installation work in the home, they brought it within the scope of the Building Regulations. In order for that to be workable they decreed that electricians who were deemed to be competent to do so could self-certify their work as compliant.

They turned to organisations such as the National Inspection Council for Electrical Installation Contracting and the National Association of Professional Inspectors and Testers to run schemes for assessing the competence of electricians, and had their operations and competence verified by the government appointed United Kingdom Accreditation Service.

There is zero chance that any court, or arbitration service, is going to take any notice of an electrician, no matter how qualified, skilled, and experienced, going on about how these schemes have pushed the industry into the gutter. If the issue at stake is how the electrician coded a contravention of the Wiring Regulations they are going to question why he disregarded the advice of NICEIC/NAPIT/whoever contained in their best practice guide(s).


The wiring regs lay down the standards an installation must meet to be compliant supported by the onsite guide how difficult is it to make that decision when it comes to coding a non-compliances that you have to pick up yet another publication where the authors / contributors can't all agree when you speak to some of them on the correct coding of some issues
It's not so much the difficulty of deciding on a code which is the problem, although I'm sure that there are instances where even skilled and experienced people look at something and can't decide if it's obviously a C2 vs C3, it's consistency and predictability.

When the legal status of a tenancy, and a landlord's livelihood are at stake it is not right that they should hinge on whether he had Tom or Dick produce the report.

With a book that lists a generic faults and coding solutions what do you do when none of the generic faults matches what you have found if the NAPIT / NICEIC publications differ where do you go for the casting vote
As I said - it is not satisfactory that different guides give different advice.

While industries have best practices the electrical industry mandarins have chosen to totally ignore a number of best practices within the industry to the extent we now have a shambles of an industry driven by money and petty bickering and not by standards
Yes, but....

I don't need to think about but may be you do if you think BS7671 is a best practice guide , BS7671 is an industry ACOP's currently supported by a set of guidance notes that has been around in many different editions for many years
If you want to dance on the head of the "best practice guide" vs "approved code of practice" pin of terminology then go ahead, but I'm not going to partner you.

Why have the IET not published any guidance on coding or do they consider it is already out there in the publications they have produced
You'd have to ask them why they don't have it in GN3.
 
I have been driving for over forty years. When I had to change to summer time on the clock in my nice modern car. Like most men I felt I had enough experience to do so without searching through a 90 page users manual. Alas!! after half an hour of cursing and cussing I succumbed. And arriving at menu option 6 setting 22, managed to get the bloody time right. So much for experience and not needing books ??.
My nice modern car (11 years old) does it automagically. It's quite fun to watch it when the clocks go back, because as well as the digital ones it also has an analogue clock, and the hands don't go backwards, so the first time you turn the ignition on after the end of BST they whizz forwards 11 hours.

My previous car needed me to do it. I just left it on GMT all year round.
 
Completely agree with all you say I really do. The problem is we are getting to a point where good electricians will be having sleepless nights because there being held accountable by an aggressive legal team who can pick holes in all those grey areas we mention on forums like this. What grey areas I hear you ask. Anything that results in long debates of code 2, code 3, regulation this, regulation that, mandatory, non mandatory. A good legal team will be laughing its socks off. We are electricians not lawyers and any sparky who feels smug and cosy hiding behind a book is going to be in for a hell of a shock. (Excuse the pun)
If we find ourselves having differing opinions, and providing different interpretations on this forum. We need to start looking at the bigger picture and realising that sooner or later WE are the ones that are being put in harms way. Please don't think that any level of experience and qualifications will make you bullet proof in this tsunami of EICR's that are recently becoming a legal requirement. As an example you C3 a 2nd floor flat for no rcd protection to socket circuits because of the very fact the flats 2 floors up. Or even no code it. Some tenant chucks an extension lead out the window and as a result receives a fatal shock. YOUR EICR is now being dragged through the legal system because a life has been lost. You know you have done nothing wrong, but how the hell will that help you with those sleepless night before going to trial. The whole things a farce, and once again good Sparkies will be thrown to the wolves'. and all the rule makers will just crawl back under there stones. Its about time they got there act together and started backing up the very people they purport to support, with some clearly defined legally enforceable guidance.
Mark my words. (Rant over)
I take your point and they are valid concerns.

Though the reality is that there has always been a "duty of care" on electricians - and landlords have always had a requirement to maintain a safe electrical installation - so the recent law has been more about putting something in writing (badly) rather than a massive change in actual requirements on "legal duties"

Fortunately for any of us having sleepless nights perhaps, but unfortunately for the trade/society in general, there has been little to no appetite to crack down on shoddy workmanship, let alone dodgy advice. The number of prosecutions under Part P has been pitiful, despite the obvious poor workmanship that is regularly displayed on this forum. New Build houses continue to be built shoddily with bad practice evident at every turn, and the companies reel in the profits with no sign of anything ever changing (the opposite perhaps, with the gradual privatisation of building control).

Even Grenfell has not brought a massive change in attitude, given the number of properties that still have similar cladding on many years later with no urgency to fix them until someone has decided who is going to pay.

There have been limited cases brought where individual deaths have occurred, though those were more to do with faking test results or failing to complete relevant documentation rather than actually about the quality of an install or disputing someone's judgement.

At least as things stand, I don't think that those who do their best to follow suitable guidance or have the relevant experience to trust their own judgements have much to fear from lawyers - though it would be nice to know that there was an industry body that was more interested in supporting its members with clear guidance and backing them in such cases than seeking how to increase their income with new schemes and books, etc.

Put simply, there is so much low hanging fruit in the game that anyone who manages to reach even the first branch is likely to be better than average....

Not the situation as it should be, I agree, but that's always been the case...
 
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The build of main switches.
How many times have you guys just wished you could tighten that main switch terminal so that you can be happy that the copper on that 25mm tail is nice and secure. But no !! you cant, because even though your no Arnold Schwarzenegger any attempt to give it that extra tweak will see the ruddy thing start to part at the seems.
So you rely on that nice torque driver knowing full well that with a little bit of movement the ruddy things going to loosen back up.
And can we please have two sturdy screws for each tail?


How was this very serious flaw dealt with when fires started springing up. Surround this shoddy gear in a conductive material in an attempt to contain the fire. (you couldn't make this stuff up) So now you have tick boxes waived in front of you with things like made of non combustible material go on lads what you going to do ?? Plastic C/U no code? code 3? Hang on, looks like its been getting a bit warm !! c2 then.
Or is it/isn't it under a wooden staircase, or in an escape route?
 
My nice modern car (11 years old) does it automagically. It's quite fun to watch it when the clocks go back, because as well as the digital ones it also has an analogue clock, and the hands don't go backwards, so the first time you turn the ignition on after the end of BST they whizz forwards 11 hours.

My previous car needed me to do it. I just left it on GMT all year round.
Yep mines on auto now, so next winter should be ok. But I needed that ruddy book to sort it. Very disappointed in myself. ?
 
Edited for clarity:

I don't think that those who do their best have little to fear from lawyers
Did you mean that, or did you mean that you do think that those who do their best to follow guidance etc have little to fear?

In any event, I suspect the biggest fear people should have is not being held to account after some dreadful incident, it's having their report challenged or their payment refused or a refund of it sought by a landlord over disputed C2s.
 
I have been driving for over forty years. When I had to change to summer time on the clock in my nice modern car. Like most men I felt I had enough experience to do so without searching through a 90 page users manual. Alas!! after half an hour of cursing and cussing I succumbed. And arriving at menu option 6 setting 22, managed to get the bloody time right. So much for experience and not needing books ??.
Nice story. But there's a significant difference between an instruction manual for a specific appliance, and a guidebook designed to take the place of experience (eg. Codebreakers).

Our instruction manual is mainly BS7671, which can be learned and an exam passed on knowledge of its contents, in a matter of a few days. But, as I'm sure many will agree, to be able to look in detail at an existing installation with a view to making recommendations (which could have cost implications along with safety of life implications) takes several years of on the job experience, to do it right.

As I have said, these guides can be useful, but it seems many newly qualified electricians are setting themselves up to do EICRs, using ONLY these guides to help them make their recommendations (because they lack the necessary experience), and getting it very wrong in many cases.
 
Edited for clarity:


Did you mean that, or did you mean that you do think that those who do their best to follow guidance etc have little to fear?

In any event, I suspect the biggest fear people should have is not being held to account after some dreadful incident, it's having their report challenged or their payment refused or a refund of it sought by a landlord over disputed C2s.
Joys of editing and changing one clause but not another - as hopefully the rest makes clear I don't think those who make best efforts to follow guidance etc have MUCH to fear as things stand.

No-one should ever be arrogant enough to not occasionally question their own judgement or seek a third party verification or advice - the issue seems to be that what is available is not clear or consistent, or from a source that is so authoritative that it cannot be disputed (not necessarily by lawyers - they will dispute or support anyway as that is their whole method of working).
 

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