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I've just moved into a new house, It's a 4 year home built by a major developer. The previous couple who lived here were non-diy savvy and from speaking to them on numerous occasions the only work done on the house was decorating and flooring which they got people in to do.

Now, the house has Crabtree accessories which I personally think are unsightly and have yellowed over the last few years even through nobody has smoked in the house. So, I'm currently going around changing them out for Hager items and making a few minor alterations.

I have an external single garage. It is fed by a 6mm² T&E to a double back box in my dining room. In the back box there is a set of connectors where it joints onto a 6mm² 3 core SWA which goes into the garage. I can't see any ducts and the cable appears to be directly in the ground. While I was swapping out accessories I decided to change the blank plate on this back box and found this...
http://i.Upload the image directly to the thread.com/7LZeKwG.jpg?3
http://i.Upload the image directly to the thread.com/hY5PUL8.jpg?2


So no earthed armouring, no earthed back box and no earth tape on the black conductor of the SWA. Now I must admit I've seen a lot worse, but I'm quite annoyed that you buy a new-ish house with a copy of the EIC and come across something like this.

Now, regardless of the fact this doesn't meet BS7671 522.8.10, I thought this was downright lazy and of course I couldn't leave it as it was.

https://i.Upload the image directly to the thread.com/CtEbUX8.jpg

No my tidiest job but I managed to gland the cable off in the wall which left me with very grazed knuckles. I've used a serrated washer on the back of the SWA gland to ensure good continuity between the gland and the back box and I've obviously earthed the back box.

Now there's the issue of the hole I cut in the wall. The house is dot and dabbed so it's a simple case of cutting in a new piece of plasterboard, gluing it in with dry lining adhesive and a light skim of filler. The issue is my Wife who has said if it was such an issue, surely I should get the contractor back to fix or at least pay to fix the mess and she wants me at the bare minimum to contact the NHBC.

Now, would you just fix this yourself and leave it where it was or would you get others involved to pay for the costs of repair?

The only other interesting thing is there is a 30mA RCD in the garage despite the garage being fed from an RCD protected section of the CU in the house. o_O
 
You're lucky it's 6.0mm most new builds have only 2.5, when I used to work for a company that did new houses we took the T& E outside to an IP box to convert to SWA.Although not textbook if the other end was soundly made off using gland and preferably earthnut wouldn't of worried.
 
It's a disgrace, but not much to do about it, I agree.
However, I'm just wondering how big the housing estate is....and how many other examples could be found with something similar.....now that COULD be interesting and maybe stir something up with a major housing developer.
 
Hum .............. not sure how a brick laying robot could wire a house:)
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Simples! [ElectriciansForums.net] Found this in my 4 year old house...
 
It's a disgrace, but not much to do about it, I agree.
However, I'm just wondering how big the housing estate is....and how many other examples could be found with something similar.....now that COULD be interesting and maybe stir something up with a major housing developer.
Could be quite common in that street :(
 
As all big developments have the same crews working the different trades, each house will be as good or as bad as the effort and professionalism the crews apply.
If they are slapdash I imagine that the first (practice) house and the last (bored now) house could be below par!
Just my opinion on recent works in a 90s Bristol development that had no creativity when it came to the lighting radial for upstairs - it looked DIY. It had never been touched from purchase.
Taking pride may take a little longer but worth the investment especially with people spending over 1/4 million on houses these days.
 
Unfortunately this is not a rare sight. It is a bit quicker to do it incorrectly so some folk (being polite) do it. Perhaps think about Wago style connectors to get all the earths together without being in series :)

I'm a huge fan of wago connectors, unfortunately the connectors I own only go upto 4mm so no good in this case. Also, a lot of my tools and gear went to my Fathers garage before I moved and I've yet to collect it so I didn't have any cable when I started this job last night! :rolleyes:

Instead of cutting the earth before terminating it in the back box I just bent it over itself tightly, should either termination come loose I will still have an earth on the other end.
https://i.Upload the image directly to the thread.com/mPnaqXm.jpg?1



Presumably the contractor doing the installation did the EIC? You could flag it with which ever scheme they’re with and see if there are any SM review spots you can highlight it on. Otherwise don’t waste your time and sit back knowing that you’ve sorted it :cool:

Funny you should mention that. The company I work for had a visit from out NIC rep a few weeks ago and I was chatting to him about moving and he told me the company who did the install on our estate and said he'd not long had a visit with them. Might be worth giving him a call. I suspect the entire house of 250 houses is the same.

You're lucky it's 6.0mm most new builds have only 2.5, when I used to work for a company that did new houses we took the T& E outside to an IP box to convert to SWA.Although not textbook if the other end was soundly made off using gland and preferably earthnut wouldn't of worried.

I was quite surprised that it was 6mm². Prior to moving I was considering my options for putting a larger supply into the garage assuming it was going to be a 13A spur off the house ring final. I'm planning on replacing the current Wylex split board with a Hager board and individual RCBO's. Pending a cable calc I'm going to look into upgrading the circuit to 40A, obviously the current 32A connector blocks won't suffice so I need to look into something else, possibly just a set of 6mm² through crimps.

I popped out to the garage earlier and took a good look at the termination the other end. No better and the SWA not earthed that end either!
https://i.Upload the image directly to the thread.com/5kuJ9zO.jpg?1
https://i.Upload the image directly to the thread.com/VS8eiDP.jpg?1

I went luminaire shopping with my Missus yesterday and bought a few lights for the living room, dining room and hall. Changing them all over today and every single light had it's loop in a connector block taped to the wiring in the void above.
https://i.Upload the image directly to the thread.com/SqZJcrw.jpg?1

Wago box, wago connectors and a 64mm dry lining box to fix the lights to. Always done this and it makes future light changing an absolute doddle!
https://i.Upload the image directly to the thread.com/0a8Gjec.jpg?1
https://i.Upload the image directly to the thread.com/HwSS0Tw.jpg?1
https://i.Upload the image directly to the thread.com/ANIJJGH.jpg?1
https://i.Upload the image directly to the thread.com/8OyzcRI.jpg?1
 

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