But while they maybe suitably qualified there is no assessment made by any of the accredition bodies as to whether they have sufficient experience and knowledge to carry out EICR'sI realise NECEIC cannot force an inspector to change a report. However, the NICEIC provide accreditation to electricians, which recognises that they are qualified to perform a particular activity.
The current EICR you have looks more like a NAPIT report given the colours and layout so why would the NICEIC have any interest
The industry guidelines are set out by the IET in BS7176 there are various other publications which offer guidance but only offer a one size fits all solution which does not necessarily fit all installations and their varying levels of delapidation and maintenance and the ever changing legislative and regulatory changes since the initial installationIf an electrician is not able to follow established industry recognised guidelines laid down by the accreditation body, and arbitrarily applies his own opinion to a report that a client requests, expecting it to performed to those industry recognised standards, then that electrician should no longer be accredited by that body.
When it comes to I&T it is difficult to guarantee any consistency with the levels of qualifications and more importantly the knowledge and experience of any given inspector, it is widely accepted that some companies are actively looking for remedial works to bolster the low initial inspection costsIf there is no mechanism to ensure consistency of standards or remove accreditation if deviation cannot be justified, it makes a mockery of accreditation and renders it meaningless.
Reading both the initial report and the latest EICR it does raise other questions regarding the 2014 report that is mentioned and the frequency of the EICR's given that it is a thatched property and then we are back to the competence of the inspector
With regard to the latest report
the "calculated" Zs results for Lights 1 - 5 seem odd and likely down to an R2 wander lead not being nulled when testing R2
it seems to be completely missing the test results for DB3
there is a lot of N/A's where it would have been just as easy to note DB locations or "supplied from" info
The next recommended inspection at 10 years in the latest report seems to have ignored the recommendation that thatched properties are electrically inspected every 5 years given that the previous inspection was in 2014 it does raise other questions about that report especially when the initial installation cert recommended 5 years
Are you referring to the original installation cert and the 2014 report or do you have another reportSo I have two reports that have not flagged RCD protection as a problem until the most recent,
Given that the cost of RCBO's has fallen in recent times to install them at the time of the initial installation may have incurred a quite significant cost back then which you may have chosen not to accept. If they were installed back in 2008 they would be AC type when currently with the changes to the regs A type or sometimes B type are the required normand I am now expected to pay a significant sum to correct this apparent “fail” when this is how the installation was performed and presumably signed off by a competent person, which I am obviously confused and upset about.
Questions - Answers in blue
- Was the installation and first inspection performed correctly in 2008? IMO yes
- What documents would I need determine specification stated in the planning approval? not sure what you are asking in relation to the electrical installation
- If not, do I have any recourse with the builder or electrical company that did the initial installation in 2008? the original design met the requirements of BS7671 at the time you could ask why you were not given the option of RCBO's at additional cost but I doubt you would get very far persuing it and the time spent and costs that would be incurred would be better spent updating the installation to meet current regs
- Should the most recent inspection have been flagged as “fail” based on the information provided here? It is difficult to give a definitive answer sat at a keyboard having never seen the installation my opinion as an inspector on the ground may differ to the one you have with the current EICR with regard to the remedial works get a few quotes / opinions from a few other electricians locally
As a footnote it may be worth checking your property insurance as from past experience they can be a bit picky when it comes to thatched properties and the fire risk