View the thread, titled "**CU Changes And YOU**" which is posted in Electrical Wiring, Theories and Regulations on Electricians Forums.

The alteration or addition itself (the installation of the replacement consumer unit) should be verified fully in accordance with the requirements of BS 7671 and an Electrical Installation Certificate , detailing the work, should be given to the customer. If a full Electrical Installation Condition Report on the installation has not been provided as part of the work, consideration should be given by the installer to stating this on the certificate with a recommendation this should be done.
 
eic for board and eicr for circuits or are you putting yourself down as the installer of the circuits on the paperwork?

Tosh.

Description of works.

"Replacement fuseboard."

How does that say you've installed the circuits? It doesn't - it sums up the scope of the EIC.
 
eic for board and eicr for circuits or are you putting yourself down as the installer of the circuits on the paperwork?

You would normally carry out the EICR as a seperate job before carrying out any other works.
You certainly wouldn't give the customer a free EICR as part of a CU change!
 
Have a quick look around the installation first, if it looks a bit rough and you don't want to put your name against it then walk. Always tell your customer that you will only proceed with the CU change once you have completed an EICR, if there are any faults you can then quote to repair or rewire and change the CU at the same time, or if there are no faults, you can go ahead with the swap and know there will be no issues later on. Explain this to your customer and if they don't agree to your terms then get out of there. They're either time wasters, want you to do it at foreigner prices or they've something to hide. I've had this rule since I qualified, never fails.
 
Have a quick look around the installation first, if it looks a bit rough and you don't want to put your name against it then walk. Always tell your customer that you will only proceed with the CU change once you have completed an EICR, if there are any faults you can then quote to repair or rewire and change the CU at the same time, or if there are no faults, you can go ahead with the swap and know there will be no issues later on. Explain this to your customer and if they don't agree to your terms then get out of there. They're either time wasters, want you to do it at foreigner prices or they've something to hide. I've had this rule since I qualified, never fails.

Welcome to the forum matthodge, your input is welcome but check the posting dates when adding comments, this thread hasn't been active since May and was originally started 5yrs ago.

Ill close the thread now, anyone wishing to add advice can always start a new thread up on the subject, new threads will allow for the various regulations that have since been added or ammended since this thread was started.
 
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