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Discuss Consumer unit extension wiring in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

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Hi all! I'm not a spark but know enough to be able to install off grid solar etc. I've just purchased a new house and have noticed the consumer unit was extended at some point:

[ElectriciansForums.net] Consumer unit extension wiring


The additional unit is from the kitchen as they had a new kitchen fitted. My concerns are with the quality of the work. No glands are used and all wiring enters the side, the cables also have sheathing cut short so the wires are exposed. I'd have thought some simple chaffing could expose a wire and short the consumer unit:


[ElectriciansForums.net] Consumer unit extension wiring


Due to these concerns I opened up the box to take a look at the method used to extend the wires:

[ElectriciansForums.net] Consumer unit extension wiring


I have a few questions here... why are glands not used? Is it ok not to use a DIN rail and simply extend all circuits with lever terminals? If so, would splice connectors 221-2411 not be more suitable? If the cables aren't long enough to reach a DIN rail, would it be best to use a Wiska Consumer Unit Relocator for any circuits that do have a wire long enough, and then extend the others?

I'm assuming this is legal, but sloppy work.
 
Unfortunately the cables aren't long enough to allow the Wago junction box to be used correctly, what's the best way to resolve this, if any?
Without seeing it for myself this is a bit of a guess, but I'd probably grab a 20mm holesaw and make three or four holes holes is the back of the top of the Wago XL box near the top, mark everything with a Sharpie and then feed the short original wires through the back of the box, resulting in the short wires being nearer the top, and the box being mounted lower down.
When done you should fit cable ties so no one can easily unclip the front.

EDIT you may have to flip 180 degrees so the wago's are at the bottom, and the new cables enter at the top
 
Out of interest, if I ever upgraded to rcbo's, I'm assuming these are all single pole aside from the 'sockets first floor' because I've found this is actually incorrectly labeled and it's actually sockets for both floors with two cables entering the one mcb. Therefore it'd require a double pole rcbo?

...or is it simply wired like that as its a ring and not a radial, therefore still a single pole rcbo
 
Just an observation, but you are aware as a non-spark you're not supposed to be working on a consumer unit ? If something went wrong and traced back to the CU your house insurance company could have an issue with it, let alone buildings control as its notifiable work - Just an observation, I'm surprised no one else has picked up on that in the first post.
 
Just an observation, but you are aware as a non-spark you're not supposed to be working on a consumer unit ? If something went wrong and traced back to the CU your house insurance company could have an issue with it, let alone buildings control as its notifiable work - Just an observation, I'm surprised no one else has picked up on that in the first post.
Looks like he’s more competent than the one that did it originally. 😳
 
I'll be able to sign off domestic installs imminently. Seeing the level of workmanship drove me to study the level 3 etc. The consumer unit is now all sorted and the junction box is completely removed, alls the original installer had to do was move the consumer unit down a foot to make the original wiring long enough 🤷🏻‍♂️

With the removal of the unrequired joins/extensions, and with rcbos and an spd introduced alongside properly 'torqued' connections I'm a lot more comfortable with the installation.
 
Are we going to get into another discussion of what can and cant be done by a homeowner?

If it needs signed off, notified, by a member of CPS... then they wouldn't sell consumer units to joe public in a DIY shed....

Anybody can do the work, then just get a spark to do an EICR on it..... (which would possibly be cheaper to do the work in the first place)
 
Are we going to get into another discussion of what can and cant be done by a homeowner?

If it needs signed off, notified, by a member of CPS... then they wouldn't sell consumer units to joe public in a DIY shed....

Anybody can do the work, then just get a spark to do an EICR on it..... (which would possibly be cheaper to do the work in the first place)
I was commenting on the statement made by muso31- "I'll be able to sign off domestic installs imminently".

As a self confessed non spark, how is this going to work? As the schemes have minimum requirements for joining up, and the only way for a competent person to sign off their own work is by joining a scheme?

Yes, anyone can purchase and install a consumer unit. They may even do the job better than some sparks. And they may produce the correct certification after doing the required testing. And they can arrange to notify building control before commencing the work and pay the fee (usually in the hundreds of pounds). But that's not the same thing as being able to sign off one's own work, including notification to building control.
 
Just an observation, but you are aware as a non-spark you're not supposed to be working on a consumer unit ?
Says who ? He's not replacing the CU, and he's not adding a new circuit. So no notifiable work involved (in England). Of course, the scams would prefer people to think otherwise for the benefit of themselves.
If something went wrong and traced back to the CU your house insurance company could have an issue with it
Possibly, unlikely though.
let alone buildings control as its notifiable work
As noted, not notifiable.
Just an observation, I'm surprised no one else has picked up on that in the first post.
Perhaps because we don't see a problem - other than with the "poor" work that's being put right.
 
Don't see why people can't fit their own, it all depends on how critical you want to be with the paperwork. I may be wrong but its not illegal to not have something like this signed off with a buildings notice, from what I can see it only has to comply with the latest building regulations. So as long as it is fitted according to the latest regs there is nothing anyone can do about it.

There must be thousands of fully built extensions around the country that have never had a completion certificate issued by the local council but they are all still standing, so for half a century or more now without any sort of comeback.
 

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