take no notice of buzz. he's a train wreck when sober. gets lucid after a bottle or 2 of Jack Daniels. .
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Discuss Mains wired smoke / heat / CO detector question in the Electrical Wiring, Theories and Regulations area at ElectriciansForums.net
Thanks littlesparkIf the CU is being moved 6ft up the wall, its not going to be at a regulation height, ie it'll be too near the ceiling. You'll need steps to reset a breaker.
Nothing wrong with using battery powered smokes with radiolink interconnect from Aico for example. More expensive to buy, but saving time on install. (4 detectors, 30 minutes tops) and theres no cables to run under floors etc. No damage to existing decoration.
The only thing not regulation with the board is that its plastic. Buy a metal one yourself and use the existing breakers. Just has to be the same make of board.
Is this electrician already doing work for you or is there a chance of getting other quotes?
How can you tell from the photo whether the consumer unit is made out of metal??On the face of it there's no requirement to swap out a perfectly good distribution board. It may not be the very latest but is still fit for purpose and a very good make.
As for smokes/heat/Co detectors etc as I'm guessing yours is a private property then there's no requirement for mains powered devices although they are my preferred option.
Has the electrician mentioned membership of any scheme such as NICEIC/STROMA/NAPIT etc?
I would seek quotes from another two electricians, if you know anyone that could recommend one then great if not post up a rough location then I'm sure a forum member would be close by and able to quote for you.
So why is the consumer unit being moved up the wall?CU is moving about 6ft up the wall it's currently fixed to, mains cable runs up the same wall.
We've not anticipated any circuits being extended as the current rooms already have lights, sockets, oven etc. circuits in them. There will be some moving of wiring but doubt there'll be additional circuits needed. There are 3 spare module slots in the current CU if that makes any difference.
Reply to Mains wired smoke / heat / CO detector question in the Electrical Wiring, Theories and Regulations area at ElectriciansForums.net