A domestic TNS installation has a 100mA RCD main switch and 'Type 2' MCBs.
I Need to move a kitchen socket away from a hob, install an additional one, install a fused spur unit for an extractor hood, and move two light switches to the other side of a room.
The customer is a right pain and it needs doing as CHEAPLY as possible because my kitchen fitter mate can't get any money out of her for electrical work as she was lead to believe (by the person who passed the job on to him) that it was included in the estimate
.
What is the minimum I can do in this situation?
I was thinking of mounting 2x stand alone 30mA RCDs to the side of the consumer unit and feeding the circuits from these (RCDs fed from old MCBs in board)
May have trouble testing the new RCDs though due to the 100mA RCD.
Discrimination wouldn't be clearly provided but they are existing circuits.
Would it be at all possible to just do the work and leave the existing protection arrangements as they are and note that it was recommended to upgrade CU on the certificate but that the installation is no worse off safety-wise?
Hmm
I Need to move a kitchen socket away from a hob, install an additional one, install a fused spur unit for an extractor hood, and move two light switches to the other side of a room.
The customer is a right pain and it needs doing as CHEAPLY as possible because my kitchen fitter mate can't get any money out of her for electrical work as she was lead to believe (by the person who passed the job on to him) that it was included in the estimate
.
What is the minimum I can do in this situation?
I was thinking of mounting 2x stand alone 30mA RCDs to the side of the consumer unit and feeding the circuits from these (RCDs fed from old MCBs in board)
May have trouble testing the new RCDs though due to the 100mA RCD.
Discrimination wouldn't be clearly provided but they are existing circuits.
Would it be at all possible to just do the work and leave the existing protection arrangements as they are and note that it was recommended to upgrade CU on the certificate but that the installation is no worse off safety-wise?
Hmm