Discuss How not to standard is this rewire? in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

JimCee

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Hi,
My son has just (last week) had a rewire done on his house in Leyland. He has just bought the house but a "domino" type consumer unit was spotted and so a rewire was deemed necessary.
He wanted to move in with his girlfriend and 2 month old son as quickly as possible so phoned a website to get electricians to call him with quotes based on the job being done ASAP.
Electrician gave him a quote £3000 and he accepted - work could be done the following week. The day arrived and was completed in the day by "a load of very young people" and the house was in a right state.
They have run 4 spurs in the house which I thought was pretty poor for a rewire and I don't know if this is to regulations.
But the real problem came when I was reboarding the loft. There were a load of chopped wires in the way of the boards so I pulled them back as far as possible and cut them further back. Whilst pulling the wires, the skirting board fell off. Behind the skirting board, there was a hole in the plaster board and an old fashioned connection block (with screws) fell out as did the ends of 2 conductors. One of the 3 wires that came out of this block was in the way of the boards. As conductors had dropped out, obviously an old wire I thought and so started cutting it with my electrical cutters and the upstairs socket ring tripped.
On investigation, the new upstairs socket ring has been cut, the earth conductors cut back - breaking the earth ring, the positive and neutral conductors having been pushed into the connector but not screwed down properly and the cable that I had cut - upon tracing was actually an open live cable - just lying under the loft insulation.
Looking round, the new lighting circuit has been extended - also by means of an old fashioned type connector block with screws in and taped up.
I was furious and phoned the electrician who between my rants told me that it was perfectly reasonable to extend the lighting circuit by means of a taped up connector block with screws to secure the conductors.
The electrician has given my son an electrical certificate (which I haven't seen and probably wouldn't understand) but on reading info on the internet, I cannot understand how he has done a test with the earth conductors on the upstairs ring being cut back at the loose connection block breaking the circuit.
The guy is coming back on Monday to "have a look what is going on" but apart from being outright dangerous with an open ended live cable, are the old fashioned screw type connector blocks acceptable - whether taped or un-taped, are spurs to standard and can I report this guy and if so, who to?
Thanks for any advice,
Jim.
 
are the old fashioned screw type connector blocks acceptable
Yes, if correctly installed in a suitable type of box, fixed in position with the cables secured against movement etc. In that respect nothing has changed. However, under the current regulations, all types of screw terminal must be accessible for maintenance, i.e. not permanently boxed in or boarded over. Where a junction is inaccessible, only jointing systems approved as 'Maintenance Free' to BS5733 may be used, which do not include any type of screw terminals. It is never acceptable to leave terminals or cable joints loose and just wrapped in tape; all must be suitably housed within a fixed enclosure with the cables secured etc.

They have run 4 spurs in the house which I thought was pretty poor for a rewire
Spurs from ring circuits have always been and still are perfectly acceptable, subject to certain standard practices such as unfused spurs feeding only one point, only one spur being taken from each point on the ring etc. If used inappropriately or unnecessarily, they can be an indication of bad design or corner-cutting. Fused spurs feeding multiple socket-outlets are a nuisance and indicate faulty design or working around existing problems.

The electrician has given my son an electrical certificate
It might be interesting to see this posted with the identity of the contractor and customer redacted. However, the 'work' might be sufficiently chaotic that sorting it out renders the present cert irrelevant.

On investigation, the new upstairs socket ring has been cut, the earth conductors cut back - breaking the earth ring,
...
I cannot understand how he has done a test with the earth conductors on the upstairs ring being cut back
If one result is fictitious, they might all be. We can sometimes spot these cases by inconsistencies in the numbers.

a "domino" type consumer unit was spotted and so a rewire was deemed necessary
This amuses me. I have been installing, removing, collecting, documenting and discussing electrical fittings for nearly 50 years without ever hearing this expression. I'm guessing that 'domino' refers to Wylex BS3036 units that have the two coloured dots on each fuse carrier indicating the rating. Who else has heard them called this? On a different note, although rewireable fuses can be a sign of an old installation that is due for replacement, there is no hard and fast rule to that effect. Only an EICR will indicate whether rewiring is 'necessary.' I'll take a punt that one was not done.

I'm sure others will be along soon with ideas on how to proceed with the contractor and remedials. If the general standard is acceptable but there are snags, one should give the contractor an opportunity to rectify them, perhaps documenting them along the way in case the resolution is not satisfactory, OTOH if the 'work' indicates a serious lack of competence or disregard for compliance, you have a dilemma which will probably attract a variety of suggestions from said others....
 
Yes, if correctly installed in a suitable type of box, fixed in position with the cables secured against movement etc. In that respect nothing has changed. However, under the current regulations, all types of screw terminal must be accessible for maintenance, i.e. not permanently boxed in or boarded over. Where a junction is inaccessible, only jointing systems approved as 'Maintenance Free' to BS5733 may be used, which do not include any type of screw terminals. It is never acceptable to leave terminals or cable joints loose and just wrapped in tape; all must be suitably housed within a fixed enclosure with the cables secured etc.


Spurs from ring circuits have always been and still are perfectly acceptable, subject to certain standard practices such as unfused spurs feeding only one point, only one spur being taken from each point on the ring etc. If used inappropriately or unnecessarily, they can be an indication of bad design or corner-cutting. Fused spurs feeding multiple socket-outlets are a nuisance and indicate faulty design or working around existing problems.


It might be interesting to see this posted with the identity of the contractor and customer redacted. However, the 'work' might be sufficiently chaotic that sorting it out renders the present cert irrelevant.


If one result is fictitious, they might all be. We can sometimes spot these cases by inconsistencies in the numbers.


This amuses me. I have been installing, removing, collecting, documenting and discussing electrical fittings for nearly 50 years without ever hearing this expression. I'm guessing that 'domino' refers to Wylex BS3036 units that have the two coloured dots on each fuse carrier indicating the rating. Who else has heard them called this? On a different note, although rewireable fuses can be a sign of an old installation that is due for replacement, there is no hard and fast rule to that effect. Only an EICR will indicate whether rewiring is 'necessary.' I'll take a punt that one was not done.

I'm sure others will be along soon with ideas on how to proceed with the contractor and remedials. If the general standard is acceptable but there are snags, one should give the contractor an opportunity to rectify them, perhaps documenting them along the way in case the resolution is not satisfactory, OTOH if the 'work' indicates a serious lack of competence or disregard for compliance, you have a dilemma which will probably attract a variety of suggestions from said others....
Thanks for your reply Lucien.

The Connector block where the earth conductors had been cut and the wires fell out was un-taped and not in a box, there were no clips to secure the wires - it simply fell out of the hole when the skirting board fell off (with 2 conductors also dropping out) - the connector block would not have been seen had the skirting board not fallen off.

The lighting extension is just a wire disappearing under a wall with a connection block taped up, not in a box and no securing clips.

When my son saw how furious I was, he refused to give me the electricians full name and address but I will be asking for it again today and I will happily post it.

Yes, I refer to the fuses with 2 dots and yes you are correct that an EICR was not done - but the initial inspection was done by a different electrician who - unfortunately could not do the work for over a month which was not soon enough for my son.

Personally, I would have thought that a live wire lying under the insulation IE not connected to anything or terminated was determined as a serious lack of competence. Had I got hold of the conductors that were bare then I might not be here now?

Jim.
 
OP as always @Lucien Nunes is spot on and in layman’s terms without wanting to alarm you it sounds like your son has employed team of “house bashers” as above can you post the certificate up? Redact any personal info and pics/diagrams are always helpful, when you say four spurs? Do you men 4 radial circuits?

Edit if they are having to extend new wiring with connector blocks it sounds like very poor design, or are you saying they’ve joined new cables to old? In which case that’s not really a rewire?
 
OP as always @Lucien Nunes is spot on and I’m layman’s terms without wanting to alarm you it sounds like your son has employed creme of “house badgers” as above can you post the certificate up? Redact any personal info and pics/diagrams are always helpful, when you say four spurs? Do you men 4 radio circuits?
If I can get the certificate off my son I
Hi,
My son has just (last week) had a rewire done on his house in Leyland. He has just bought the house but a "domino" type consumer unit was spotted and so a rewire was deemed necessary.
He wanted to move in with his girlfriend and 2 month old son as quickly as possible so phoned a website to get electricians to call him with quotes based on the job being done ASAP.
Electrician gave him a quote £3000 and he accepted - work could be done the following week. The day arrived and was completed in the day by "a load of very young people" and the house was in a right state.
They have run 4 spurs in the house which I thought was pretty poor for a rewire and I don't know if this is to regulations.
But the real problem came when I was reboarding the loft. There were a load of chopped wires in the way of the boards so I pulled them back as far as possible and cut them further back. Whilst pulling the wires, the skirting board fell off. Behind the skirting board, there was a hole in the plaster board and an old fashioned connection block (with screws) fell out as did the ends of 2 conductors. One of the 3 wires that came out of this block was in the way of the boards. As conductors had dropped out, obviously an old wire I thought and so started cutting it with my electrical cutters and the upstairs socket ring tripped.
On investigation, the new upstairs socket ring has been cut, the earth conductors cut back - breaking the earth ring, the positive and neutral conductors having been pushed into the connector but not screwed down properly and the cable that I had cut - upon tracing was actually an open live cable - just lying under the loft insulation.
Looking round, the new lighting circuit has been extended - also by means of an old fashioned type connector block with screws in and taped up.
I was furious and phoned the electrician who between my rants told me that it was perfectly reasonable to extend the lighting circuit by means of a taped up connector block with screws to secure the conductors.
The electrician has given my son an electrical certificate (which I haven't seen and probably wouldn't understand) but on reading info on the internet, I cannot understand how he has done a test with the earth conductors on the upstairs ring being cut back at the loose connection block breaking the circuit.
The guy is coming back on Monday to "have a look what is going on" but apart from being outright dangerous with an open ended live cable, are the old fashioned screw type connector blocks acceptable - whether taped or un-taped, are spurs to standard and can I report this guy and if so, who to?
Thanks for any advice,
Jim.
Sorry, I can't see how to edit my original post - pictures attached.
The white connector is between 2 sockets and clearly doesn't have any means of connection for the earth conductor which have been cut back to the outer insulation, not in a box or clipped up.
The end of the live wire that was just sitting under the loft insulation waiting to zap me.
The connector block forming the extension of the lighting extension taped up.
 

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OP as always @Lucien Nunes is spot on and in layman’s terms without wanting to alarm you it sounds like your son has employed team of “house bashers” as above can you post the certificate up? Redact any personal info and pics/diagrams are always helpful, when you say four spurs? Do you men 4 radial circuits?

Edit if they are having to extend new wiring with connector blocks it sounds like very poor design, or are you saying they’ve joined new cables to old? In which case that’s not really a rewire?
Thanks for the reply.
Not really sure about the radio circuits - 4 sockets have got a single wire going to them I presume connected to another socket somewhere in the house - to my mind a rewire would have been a full new ring without any spurs.
The white un-taped connector hidden behind the skirting board were all new wires.
I haven't un-taped the connector for the lighting "extension" circuit but that is a thought and will do so today.
 
Any chance he paid by credit card? Might be able to cancel the payment via card company?

Agree that posting the certificate up here will let us spot glaring obvious mistakes, but some items may need an adjoining photograph of the installation as well.

As mentioned, blank off all personal details… we can’t have this companies name on a public forum just to criticise them.

Is the company part of a competent persons scheme? Ie, NICEIC, NAPIT etc? A trade body that can be complained to? Not that they’ll do much unless said company is using the c.p.s branding without membership. (Also likely)

A photograph of the consumer unit is always good. There are recent changes to the regulations as to what should now be included.


I’m sure you know what you’re doing, but as a final comment, please be careful poking about.. there could be more live open ends ready to give you a bite..
 
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