Discuss Part P in the Electrical Wiring, Theories and Regulations area at ElectriciansForums.net

U

Um0215

Hi. I am am a qualified electrician with 17-th edition, 2391, pat testing. My question is if i want to start working for myself in domestic area do i need part p qualification on not? If yes then what was the point of spending 3 years at college? What steps do i need to do? Thank you.
 
The qualifications need to register with a self certification scheme are as specified in the scheme websites.
Having the 17th Edition (presumably 2382) and 2391 should (at the moment), so long as you are competent and aware of the electrical requirements of the building regulations, be enough to allow you entry to one of the schemes.
A part P qualification is not required.
I would suggest checking their websites to see which is most appropriate for you.
 
Hi. I am am a qualified electrician with 17-th edition, 2391, pat testing. My question is if i want to start working for myself in domestic area do i need part p qualification on not? If yes then what was the point of spending 3 years at college? What steps do i need to do? Thank you.


So what about 2330 AM2/NVQ Level 3?? I always get a little suspicious when i read ''I am a Qualified Electrician'' and i see 17th edition + PAT testing and other add-on qualifications mentioned, and sod all about the main qualification that will take most, 3 or 4 years to obtain!!
 
I'm still suspicious!! lol!! Why would you not open with your main qualification, rather than the add on fluff??

Yes, I thought the exact same thing the first time I read it, I got halfway through an almost identical response to yours, then I read it back a few times and it made sense.

I now read it as him saying that he is a fully qualified electrician, then listing his add ons.

"I've done my three years at college, and I also have 17th, T&I and PAT."
 
Thank you all for answering. There is no need to criticise me for mentioning my qualifications. I have just wanted to save you asking for my qualifications before you would answer my problem. Some of you are too harsh on your comments. Don't forget that you were in this position before probably. Nobody is born electrician. So try to understand the question before you comment. The messages I get are mixed so all I wanted to know was an electrician without part p can work for himself in domestic area or not? Thank you to those who understood me.
 
yes you can. if however the work is notifiable and you want to do it legally, the cost of notifying without being in a scam is prohibitive.

notifiable work includes any work in special locations, a new circuit, rewire, or a DB change.
 

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