Need some advice please | Page 4 | on ElectriciansForums

Discuss Need some advice please in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

Joined
Nov 4, 2017
Messages
24
Reaction score
3
Location
Cheshire
Hello,

I'm retired from the game but decided to drop in and ask the good folks here a few questions regarding issues a family member is having. Hope someone can help.

My wife's cousin has just signed a lease for a property.
They haven't occupied the property as it needs cosmetic work doing.

The decorator comes and plugs in his wallpaper stripper and the power trips, and keeps tripping on all the sockets he tries.
He thinks the paper stripper is faulty so buys a new one, same thing happens and happens again with his kettle and other equipment.

The electrical certificate shows test results as 'passed' with a few Zs and R1+R2 tests but shows the installation is 'unsatisfactory' One snag with that, there is nothing on the cert that explains why the installation is unsatisfactory.

I take a nosey at the sockets and there are old red and black cables mixed with new colours. At first glance it looks like a ring main. Then I remove another few sockets and there are old coloured single 2.5mm cables one the one supposed ring main.

Without testing this suggests there are two radials in one RCBO with new coloured cables added on with JB's. Both 2.5 cables at the consumer unit are red and black. The lighting circuit has three old coloured 1mm cables in one 6A RCBO. The consumer is new-ish but has been opened up that many times the fixing screws for the board face have been turned to mince meat leaving it almost impossible to gain access (took a while to remove)
This along with the new 10mm earth bond to the incoming polythene water mains pipe made me think the local handyman had been in.

It needs a rewire but the landlord insists the Electrician who issued the 'unsatisfactory' certificate give a quote along with other Electricians they've asked to quote for the job.
Is this guy incompetent or just plain lazy when it comes to filling out certificates, and would you ask him to quote for a job?

Thanks.
 
Have you ever rewired a property and put 3 different lighting circuits in one breaker? NO is my guess, so I have no idea what you are talking about.

The ring main isn't a ring main. It's 2 radial circuits.
70's wiring with new colour cables added by JB's, do keep up mate.

Why not? all depends on the size of the cu, the load on the circuit?

How can you be so sure?

still very smelly
 
Have you ever rewired a property and put 3 different lighting circuits in one breaker? NO is my guess, so I have no idea what you are talking about.

The ring main isn't a ring main. It's 2 radial circuits.
70's wiring with new colour cables added by JB's, do keep up mate.

I do have to repeat myself, you've come here for advice, and admittedly you'll suffer a little banter & critic, but that's what advice seeking is about. The members here have lots of experience in these and similar matters, doesn't help by being a little bit abrasive yourself. Perhaps you'll doing the same to the solicitor who you suggest has poorly advised your cousin?

Anyway I'm offski!
 
Have you ever rewired a property and put 3 different lighting circuits in one breaker? NO is my guess, so I have no idea what you are talking about.

The ring main isn't a ring main. It's 2 radial circuits.
70's wiring with new colour cables added by JB's, do keep up mate.
I'm presuming it hasn't been rewired, just added to.

Have you tested to see if there is no completed ring or found other definite evidence that the two legs are not joined?
 
Okay, but if those circuits functioned as part of one area, one floor for example, that could be deemed acceptable. So to clarify, all the lighting for the property is controlled from one device?

Incidentally, you've come on here for advice, it doesn't bode well trying to be patronising, not withstanding you will get criticism. Just trying to be of assistance. :D

No, the lighting has been JB'd all over the place.
It has 3 cables in one RCBO. One up/one down, and one for the rear of the building. (I pulled them out one by one and switched on the lighting) + There is a bank of redundant switches that is no longer in use. the place is a mess.

I'm not trying to patronise anyone mate and I'm glad of the help ;)
 
I do have to repeat myself, you've come here for advice, and admittedly you'll suffer a little banter & critic, but that's what advice seeking is about. The members here have lots of experience in these and similar matters, doesn't help by being a little bit abrasive yourself. Perhaps you'll doing the same to the solicitor who you suggest has poorly advised your cousin?

Anyway I'm offski!

Haha. Don't take it personally. Blame my parents for my dry sense of humour.

I'd say the solicitor know exactly what he was doing to make sure the landlord wasn't out of pocket for long. If the contract doesn't get renewed he doesn't get paid.

Thanks for your input BTW.
 
Last edited:
Get a local spark in, complete an EICR then go from there. A rewire may not be needed, just fault finding and perhaps some additional circuits. If the lease contract stated, as you say 'new occupier to complete building works' then hire a electrical contractor of your choice and not the landlords handyman.
 
I'm presuming it hasn't been rewired, just added to.

Have you tested to see if there is no completed ring or found other definite evidence that the two legs are not joined?

No it hasn't been rewired.
It's had new wiring JB'd to the older existing wiring.

Old colours at the board to 2 sockets (Thought it was a ring to start off with) Then new colours at other sockets, then old colour radials at other sockets. All on the same circuit.

It's definitely 2 radials in one RCBO but all joined together under the floor. Had one of the JB's exposed under the floor yesterday.
Not a pretty sight.
 
Get a local spark in, complete an EICR then go from there. A rewire may not be needed, just fault finding and perhaps some additional circuits. If the lease contract stated, as you say 'new occupier to complete building works' then hire a electrical contractor of your choice and not the landlords handyman.

Thanks.

I get the feeling the landlord would prefer a handyman due to cost.
He's said he is willing to foot the bill for the rewire, yeah right.

I've told my wife's cousin to stand his ground if the landlord insists on having his own handymen.

Why the regs are lenient for commercial property beggars belief.
 
No it hasn't been rewired.
It's had new wiring JB'd to the older existing wiring.

Old colours at the board to 2 sockets (Thought it was a ring to start off with) Then new colours at other sockets, then old colour radials at other sockets. All on the same circuit.

It's definitely 2 radials in one RCBO but all joined together under the floor. Had one of the JB's exposed under the floor yesterday.
Not a pretty sight.
Seems like a real mess.....but, if the radials are joined under the floor, there will be some sort of ring.
 
Seems like a real mess.....but, if the radials are joined under the floor, there will be some sort of ring.


It is. It used to be a house. It's one of those minimal 70's installations when all the occupier had was a TV, radio and washing machine.

If you saw it you'd know what I mean. Has rewire written all over it.

It only appears to be a ring because both radials are in the same RCBO back at the CU. Disconnect one leg and half of what seemed to be a ring go off.

Unless you removed the socket faces and carried out some proper testing the average Joe would never know.
 
Why not? all depends on the size of the cu, the load on the circuit?

How can you be so sure?

still very smelly

You're pulling my balls aren't you :rolleyes: :p

Yes it's smelly because the Landlord knew what work needed doing prior to the contract being signed + they had a survey beforehand.

Bearing in mind their solicitor would have know what work needed doing because he had the report, but nothing was said.
 
Last edited:
Why don't you take up Tels offer in #6 that way you will get a proper opinion from a highly respected forum member. Without pics or seeing the EICR no one can really give a valid opinion and arguing as to whether three wires should be on one rcbo is quite frankly pointless.
 

Reply to Need some advice please in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

News and Offers from Sponsors

  • Article
Join us at electronica 2024 in Munich! Since 1964, electronica has been the premier event for technology enthusiasts and industry professionals...
    • Like
Replies
0
Views
267
  • Sticky
  • Article
Good to know thanks, one can never have enough places to source parts from!
Replies
4
Views
762
  • Article
OFFICIAL SPONSORS These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then...
Replies
0
Views
754

Similar threads

Given that, it probably makes sense to TT the shed, unless you can be sure it doesn't act as an extraneous-conductive-part. (The SWA won't have...
Replies
10
Views
706
  • Question
none at all.... and the rcd trips within specification... test button operational.... nothing to suggest there's a problem until you take the...
    • Like
Replies
2
Views
614

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Electrician Courses Green Electrical Goods PCB Way Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Pushfit Wire Connectors Electric Underfloor Heating Electrician Courses
These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then CLICK HERE and post a thread with who you are, and we'll send you some stats etc

YOUR Unread Posts

This website was designed, optimised and is hosted by untold.media Operating under the name Untold Media since 2001.
Back
Top