Discuss This is going to take me weeks..... in the Periodic Inspection Reporting & Certification area at ElectriciansForums.net

To those following this thread....

I'm having a mare already. Slight disagreement between myself and the old boy caretaker about what i'm coding the EICR. (he used to be a spark back in the 80's i think, and has done some of the maintenance before he got too old)

Ill not divulge straight away, but simply ask you guys to convince me im not going soft.


Taking the cafe as an example. What would you code, remembering all the large metallic appliances. Kitchen staff, but members of the general public in the seating area in the vicinity of sockets and heaters.

Old circuits are still on BS88 fuses.
Every light on the same fuse.
The 3 phase oven on 3 separate fuses. (although only single phase loads. Loss of one phase isn't going to cause massive problems)

The other distribution boards are much the same.... old bs88's in some places... fuse wire in others.
Some "upgraded" to circuit breakers, but there are very few RCD's across the whole site.... even in the modernised areas.



I don't want to come across as touting for work, but at what point do you have to say, look, this is unacceptable these days.... especially with public being able to access parts of it.
 
You really ought to know that is SY cable.
The fact the public have access to xyz isn't really relevant.
Separate fuses for a three phase oven is fine in fact it would be fine for the majority of circuits.
 
Well FWIW, if its all the correct vintage (which it probably is), not much you can do but code it strictly to BS7671. I have come across similar installs and wrote a separate report on my recommendations, because the Amtech S/W i use is messy when it comes to making a case for upgrade. Last job i recommended RCBOs to all sockets based on, blah, blah and i was pleasantly surprised when they agreed.
 
Nothing wrong with bs 88 fuses as long as they are rated correctly for the cable size. Code 3 for the sockets if they are not RCD protected . Could push to a code 2 if you believe they are being used outdoors. . Why do you think the metal appliance are an issue.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Started with one of the holiday cottages today… and a handful of C3’s already. Nothing too serious.

Non standard set up. 2 cottages adjacent to each. Supplies come from one of the big DBs from the main house. Big DB also feeds public toilets.

From photo you can see SWA coming from main DB into isolator+mcb on right, through meter, for simple monitoring, then into cottage DB

You can get a bus through the holes the tails go through.

Underfloor heating in both cottages is fed from boiler for toilets… so that sw/fuse is live when cottage is isolated, and also on a different phase.

I believe (and will check next week when I do other cottage) that the hard wired smoke detectors are supplied from this cottage, but also feed the ones next door. Which means next door has all 3 phases present.

View attachment 106624
It doesn't matter that there are separate phases it is not a departure.
 
Separate fuses per phase are only a real issue if it can lead to a 3P motor limping along on a single phase and overheating, possibly becoming a fire risk. Normally the motor overload protection should stop that anyway and it is not a likely problem for such a property.

As above, I would follow the BPG#3 guidance which, though less readable now, is still C3 for no RCD in low-risk areas (i.e. typically indoors) and C2 for high risk areas (like out doors or in bathroom areas, etc.)

Lights all one one fuse is a bit dumb, but if loss of light is a serious risk anywhere then having emergency lighting is far more important as it also deals with a power cut.

I don't like SY cable but it is OK for indoor use (not UV tolerant) where the braid is not actually needed for penetration protection (not rated to clear OCPD). Its not really a very useful situation, but not specifically bad if those are not needed. SWA or Flexishield/BS8436 are cables that meet the penetration aspect, though for the foil types it is often only to a modest OCPD let-through like 20A MCB or similar.
 
Lighting circuits across three phases which share a common neutral, quite common in large scale warehouses and factories require linked circuit protection so separate fuses would not be suitable.
 
littlespark - After just over a week you have 808 views. Well done Sir. Folk are reading your posts with interest.

Do you keep a before and after record - written or photo - of the corrections you do for free or billed?

Do you do IR surveillance? ie:

Infrared Electrical Inspection, Electrical Testing Finds Hot Connections - Albany, NY | Infrared Imaging Services - https://www.infraredimagingservices.com/electrical-infrared/

If not then perhaps an added value yet paid for extra to such work as you are doing now? I have found it very useful in an industrial setting.
 

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