OP
Rikmac
Agreed, so if it is unsafe do you just energise it and tell the customer a EICR is required then and fail it that way?, your wrong and thats that, if you change a distribution board you need to add all circuits from that board to the certificate, rollocks to the EICR, I would have you in court if you ignored the existing circuits in my board and the house burned down, once you have changed the board and identified any faulty circuits it is the customers problem not yours, to suggest an EICR is the way over it is pathetic and makes me fuc**ING ANGRY, don't put the ownus on existing circuits after a new DB change on anyone else, New board change EIC, checking existing board the EICR, end of.
Right lets get this stright.....
The installation failed a EICR done by someone else.......The customer who didnt know why it had failed asked me..... to which i told her that the fuseboard,earthing and some other bits were needed to bring the installation upto the current regs and would issue her with an installation cert ......she told me that she wanted a EICR that was ok to show other buyers
there is no point filling another one out saying "fuse-board,earthing and other faults are there" so I have put the defects right
She still wants a EICR to show buyers and I have given her one free of charge as I have tested the installation as part of the EIC
I asked a question that was answered in post 2
I resent the replys that say "horse,a way round not doing a EIC ,cowboy,court" you have totally got the wrong end of the stick
There are loads of houses with borrowed neutrals on the stairs and its not a fire risk its a shock risk! if only 1 circuit is isolated and lights are energized on the other
Basicly the 2nd verified what i thought and would have checked with the niceic if they had been open today
Im not a cowboy a value my work highly.......Im not trying to rip anybody off
all circuits have been tested and i have made the customer aware of the problem told her the options and asked her what to do
I have doubled up the circuits marked it on the fuse-board and noted it on both test sheets
To be padantic.......you could engrave the circuit with "Isolate 2 supplys present" etc