Of course, if I wanted to do anything to the cables I'd test them myself first, but from the original explanation, that is not the case in point. He wanted to sort them into two categories:
a) Part of operational installation, probably being retained unless sparks says otherwise so mark on plan and don't invest time tracing at this stage.
b) Probably part of obsolete installation. Get it traced, proven dead and ripped out.
The actual proof that a cable is dead is a later part of the process.
a) Part of operational installation, probably being retained unless sparks says otherwise so mark on plan and don't invest time tracing at this stage.
b) Probably part of obsolete installation. Get it traced, proven dead and ripped out.
The actual proof that a cable is dead is a later part of the process.