Discuss Should a completion certificate always be given for works carried out please? in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

vanessap

DIY
Reaction score
14
Hi Everyone,

I had a new consumer unit installed in December 2021, the electrician said that he had more testing to complete and would come back and said it could wait. My oven also began tripping on the same day, which he felt was a faulty oven.

I asked to schedule for a few months and unfortunately due to my mother’s Alzheimer’s care need access became difficult.

Things have calmed down and for the last few months I’ve been trying to arrange for the works to be completed and a certificate given. I met with the electrician / plumbing company last week who has been very difficult about providing most of the documentation; most of it has now been provided.

He has said that for the consumer unit installed at my home there is no continuity on a ring circuit and that he will not provide a completion certificate until it is addressed. Keeping in mind I have been asking him to explain the outcome and remedy any works.

I have contacted several other electricians who have said they can address this but cannot sign off the consumer unit and have advised that a completion certificate should have been provided noting the issue.

Please can I ask for your advice? Can a completion certificate be provided just noting the issues so someone else can come in?

Is no continuity in a ring circuit very dangerous?

The electrician is NICEIC registered, might you know if it is outlined that certification of works should be provided?

Surely if it’s not then unsafe work is not accounted for, if this fault is unsafe?

Thank you so much, in advance. Any advice would be really appreciated.

Many thanks,
Vanessa
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Why don't they come and address it?
As from your previous thread most electricians will carry out some testing prior to a consumer unit change and this would have highlighted the issue. Tell them that if the issue is not resolved you will take the matter up with the NICEIC.
 
He has said that for the consumer unit installed at my home there is not continuity on a ring circuit and that he will not provide a completion certificate until it is addressed
This should have been determined before the consumer unit was changed, and a strategy agreed with you.
I have contacted several other electricians who have said they can address this but cannot sign off the consumer unit and have advised that a completion certificate should have been provided noting the issue.

Please can I ask for your advice?
The original electrician will be well aware that there are various ways to resolve this situation, ranging from full diagnosis and repair to less favourable (but compliant) workarounds that are quicker and easier. There's no excuse for changing a consumer unit, reconnecting a broken circuit, and running away saying testing and certification can wait.
 
A sparks can't issue a EIC with faults in the circuit ( lack of end to end continuity )

Either the ring needs sorting out or a quick fix would be to make it a 20a radial

either way the original sparks needs to come back or you can get another sparks to do the work , but either way the first lot of work can not be classes as finished / signed off until the issue is resolved
 
Thank you all so much for your thoughts! Yes, I can definitely share some photos later today, though I don’t know which circuit is faulty. I have an idea of what area of the house.

I have been told by another electrician who is potentially going to remediate the work that a completion certificate can be provided with explanation that the ring circuit has not got continuity with a recommendation for the works to be done; might you know if this is correct?

Can I also ask if you might know if a DEIC should note if a junction box is not properly earthed? This is a separate question for the DEIC that was given for my mum’s home. I did also ask about the earthing they said it was earthed but they were unable to find the source.

Sorry for all of the questions, I need to put my mum’s home on the market for her care costs. I am trying to make improvements and update her home but hitting brick walls when I ask this company questions. Big learning lesson.

Any advice would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks, Vanessa
 
I have been told by another electrician who is potentially going to remediate the work that a completion certificate can be provided with explanation that the ring circuit has not got continuity with a recommendation for the works to be done; might you know if this is correct?
As a lack of continuity of a ring final circuit is deemed "potentially dangerous", an installation certificate saying the installation complies with BS7671 can't be issued with the fault still present.
However another electrician could find and fix the problem and complete an EICR which would give you peace of mind that things are safe.
 
In most stituations like this I reckon most sparks would put both legs into a 20a MCB and just treat it like a bunch radial
 
Hi Everyone, Thank you so much for your advise. Here are some photos attached:

I have spoken to another electrician today and he has said that it would be possible for the previous electrician to give a certificate saying that the consumer unit has been installed but highlight that the electrics are unsafe due to the lack of ring continuity which must be addressed.

Might you know if this is correct please? I am asking so I have an idea of what to say to the electrician who installed the consumer unit. I really don't feel comfortable asking any longer for him to correct the faults as I have been asking for the certificate for months and was under the impression that it was just a faulty oven. He told me last week that it was to do with a lack of ring continuity. I have contacted NICEIC who have recommended that I make a complaint so they can investigate, as the unit was installed December 2021 and there is still no certificate. I have shared this with the electrician who seems concerned now.

Other electricians have said that they could to a EICR report for £165.00 to diagnose the problem and resolve it but it would not cover the consumer unit.

Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated. Thank you, Vanessa
 

Attachments

  • IMG_1729.jpg
    385.8 KB · Views: 45
  • IMG_1730.jpg
    369.2 KB · Views: 47
That black flexible conduit going into the bottom of it is dangerous there are wires exposed what a lash up, I would be sending a pic of that to the NICEIC if they have acknowledged your complaint.
Seems like you have used someone with little skill or competence which probably explains why they have not resolved the fault, they don't know how to.
 
That black flexible conduit going into the bottom of it is dangerous there are wires exposed what a lash up, I would be sending a pic of that to the NICEIC if they have acknowledged your complaint.
Seems like you have used someone with little skill or competence which probably explains why they have not resolved the fault, they don't know how to.
Thank you for explaining this @westward10 I also wondered about this, my mum has Alzheimer's and often walks around touching things. I have asked them to return on so many occasions and honestly would like to find a way to receive a certificate until their point of work if its needed and then find someone else to come in who is going to do a safe job
 
No wonder the bloke don't want to put his name to that board , its gash

to be honest it was fitted in 2021, I would give up with the sparks who fitted it as clearly he don't give a sh!t

get a someone different in to sort it out
 
Thank you all so much!

I thought to ask the electrician to cover the cost of an EICR with another qualified electrician who I have found and cover the costs of the remedial works myself. I don't know if they will pay but they seem worried about a complaint to the NICEIC.

Do you think this sounds fair?

Also do you know if the NICEIC take these kinds of complaints seriously please?

Many thanks,
Vanessa
 
As the great Dr Sam Beckett once said:- “oh boy!” 😉


I just don’t understand how it could be so wrong.

20mm flexi conduit …… 20mm hole….. It’s not difficult.

The NICEIC will probably tell you to get the electrician back in the first instance to rectify…. But 9/10 of these cases, I doubt the homeowner wants these cowboys anywhere near.

I’d hate to see what inside the board looks like.
 
I wonder if there were singles in the white oval conduit in the first place...difficult to see.
But why on earth he didn't find a way to run behind the board and in from the back is beyond me.
 
BG boards always say bodger, I fitted two in my life when they first came out, never again, out of two boards and 4 RCD's 2 were faulty and didn't trip, even with the test button pressed and on top of that the lid was such a pain in the arse to get on I could have fitted a whole new board in the time it took me to get it on.

Edit: looks like they are still hard to get the lid on, the right hand screw isn't done up. Also what are singles doing in oval conduit anyway, that looks like someone has drilled through the cable/conduit and done a quick repair, maybe it was done after the mains unit was fitted, cant believe someone who fits consumer units has done that, even a cowboy.
 
BG boards always say bodger, I fitted two in my life when they first came out, never again, out of two boards and 4 RCD's 2 were faulty and didn't trip, even with the test button pressed and on top of that the lid was such a pain in the arse to get on I could have fitted a whole new board in the time it took me to get it on.

Edit: looks like they are still hard to get the lid on, the right hand screw isn't done up. Also what are singles doing in oval conduit anyway, that looks like someone has drilled through the cable/conduit and done a quick repair, maybe it was done after the mains unit was fitted, cant believe someone who fits consumer units has done that, even a cowboy.
"BG boards always say bodger, I have fitted two in my life". See how that reads😂😂
You can get oval to round adaptors and it can be used for singles.
 
"BG boards always say bodger, I have fitted two in my life". See how that reads😂😂
You can get oval to round adaptors and it can be used for singles.
That's before I knew they were a bodgers board. when they first come out in Screwfix they were £50 inc VAT and were very heavy so they felt like a decent board for the money, we got two as we had two jobs to do both requiring mains units. The first one when we tested it failed the RCD test so I nicked one out of the other board and took that back as faulty. when we fitted the replacement board on the second job that had a faulty RCD as well.

whenever I see one now that has recently been fitted they never have things like the grommet strip installed or a tails gland, they are all fitted crooked and a mess inside. I asked if they got many back as faulty, no they said, I'm probably the only one that tests RCD's then on boards like that.
 

Reply to Should a completion certificate always be given for works carried out please? in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

Similar Threads

Hi Everyone, Last year arranged for my mother's and my consumer units to be changed by the same electrician who is NICEIC registered. Both jobs...
Replies
20
Views
2K
Completed my AM2s start of this year. My whole career plan is to run my own company/sole trader. Be my own boss basically. I always get asked...
Replies
14
Views
696
Hi guys, need a bit of advice, EICR was completed on the property which needed a new consumer unit and a few other bits like broken sockets and...
Replies
10
Views
818
Hi Everyone, This is my last question/post for tonight, promise. Please can I ask for a little advice on certificates as I am now questioning...
Replies
4
Views
919
Hi Everyone, Sorry in advance if this is a silly question. There is a junction box in my mother's kitchen, on the wall above her kitchen...
Replies
5
Views
952

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Electrician Courses Green Electrical Goods PCB Way Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Pushfit Wire Connectors Electric Underfloor Heating Electrician Courses
These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then CLICK HERE and post a thread with who you are, and we'll send you some stats etc

Electrical Forum

Welcome to the Electrical Forum at ElectriciansForums.net. The friendliest electrical forum online. General electrical questions and answers can be found in the electrical forum.
This website was designed, optimised and is hosted by Untold Media. Operating under the name Untold Media since 2001.
Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock