Never employ someone to do an EICR who has a Guide in their back pocket.
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Discuss EICR - Applying regs retrospectively in the Periodic Inspection Reporting & Certification area at ElectriciansForums.net
Easier to carry than the entire BBB in the back pocket!Never employ someone to do an EICR who has a Guide in their back pocket.
You shouldn't need any of them.Easier to carry than the entire BBB in the back pocket!
(Big blue book, or big brown book)
The further fun fact is that Napit's logo is on BPG4. So they endorse the best practise guide, then publish their own guide which sometimes has different advice.Then to add a note to counter that note, the BPG4 quoted above would disagree, recommending only a C3.
The IET sum up this best themselves, right at the first page of GN3: "Existing installations that have been installed in accordance with earlier editions of the Regulations may not comply with the current edition in every respect but this does not necessarily mean that they are unsafe for continued use or that they require upgrading. The person or persons carrying out the inspection and testing of such an installation must decide whether the installation is safe for continued use.... The inspector must determine whether any shortcomings are classified as safety issues or recommendations for improvement."However an EICR is carried out to current regulations not the regulations that were applicable to the original installation.
One of the reasons an EICR is carried out is to identify things which, due to changes in regulations/technology/our understanding of what is safe, can be improved or need to be improved.
Anything which does not comply but would not offer any appreciable safety improvement if it was changed to make it compliant should not be coded on an EICR.
However anything which does not comply and changing it would improve safety should be coded, regardless of whether it complied at the time of installation.
At he end of the day has long making it safe for those who are involed does not make them a bad person. It's their call not you or me. But the inspector who is testing.Never employ someone to do an EICR who has a Guide in their back pocket
It's alive Jim! However, you might not be soon.We need to remember the fundamental principles behind the codes we use -
1= I'm amazed nobody is dead yet
One fault from above.2= Somebody is likely to die if it continues
Two or more faults3= Not the best, needs looking at but isn't going to harm anyone.
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