B
BlueToBits
Hello again! it's been a while.....
I'm no longer in the business and I'm getting some building work done at home which involves a sub-distribution board / consumer unit in an attached workshop. Before anyone gets the hump, I'm no longer approved so I'm making other arrangements for the work to be done, but I'm sourcing the kit. I'm looking for a compliant flush board (plasterboard) with individual RCBO protected final circuits
I've not come across amendment 3 until very recently and even after reading numerous comments in this and other forums, I just don't get it. Please can someone clarify:
Sorry if these questions have been answered elsewhere, I haven't found them. Thanks for reading.
I'm no longer in the business and I'm getting some building work done at home which involves a sub-distribution board / consumer unit in an attached workshop. Before anyone gets the hump, I'm no longer approved so I'm making other arrangements for the work to be done, but I'm sourcing the kit. I'm looking for a compliant flush board (plasterboard) with individual RCBO protected final circuits
I've not come across amendment 3 until very recently and even after reading numerous comments in this and other forums, I just don't get it. Please can someone clarify:
- The metal clad consumer units with a plastic MCB "Doors" (eg Contactum CP metal) do not conform, even if the MCBs are thermosetting plastic? (are MCBs not fire-resistant anyhow?)
- Parts of a consumer unit that may be "flushed" into a plastered or plaster-boarded wall conform by the fact that plaster is already "fire resistant"?
- In flush CU installations, the combustible timber studs forming part of the plasterboarded wall conform as part of the fire resistant enclosure?
- Cables may be enclosed in trunking to "seal" gaps in knock-outs in the enclosure, yet the trunking may be combustible thermoplastic PVC?
- Cable insulation entering the enclosure may be combustible thermoplastic PVC?
Sorry if these questions have been answered elsewhere, I haven't found them. Thanks for reading.