Afternoon all,
Just wondering what everyone's response to the following scenario is.
Letting agents have asked us to carry out an EICR. There was a previous failed EICR that has been lost and isn't able to be retrieved. We were told that the landlord had had their own electrician in to carry out the required remedial works, but that they are no longer in contact and cannot get the certificate (I know, huge red flag). We have a very good working relationship with the agents so agreed, reluctantly, that we would carry out the EICR.
Naturally there were a few problems, but the biggest one is that it appears that a new consumer unit has been fitted. It's a fully metal Amendment 3 compliant enclosure so has to be no older than 2018, but they have fitted a single RCD main switch, no surge protection etc. Obviously we aren't fully aware of what has happened before, and under normal circumstances a single RCD on a residential EICR might only raise a C3. However, on the basis that the CU must be no older than 4-5 years, this should at the very least have a split load board. Therefore I'm giving the installation a C2 on this basis.
Anyone come across similar and handled it differently?
Just wondering what everyone's response to the following scenario is.
Letting agents have asked us to carry out an EICR. There was a previous failed EICR that has been lost and isn't able to be retrieved. We were told that the landlord had had their own electrician in to carry out the required remedial works, but that they are no longer in contact and cannot get the certificate (I know, huge red flag). We have a very good working relationship with the agents so agreed, reluctantly, that we would carry out the EICR.
Naturally there were a few problems, but the biggest one is that it appears that a new consumer unit has been fitted. It's a fully metal Amendment 3 compliant enclosure so has to be no older than 2018, but they have fitted a single RCD main switch, no surge protection etc. Obviously we aren't fully aware of what has happened before, and under normal circumstances a single RCD on a residential EICR might only raise a C3. However, on the basis that the CU must be no older than 4-5 years, this should at the very least have a split load board. Therefore I'm giving the installation a C2 on this basis.
Anyone come across similar and handled it differently?