They all have the same, I just put N/A.Absolutely. I have the same one as you, IR, R1+R2. Either do it right or don't bother, there is no need anyway!!
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Discuss New socket on ring main - replace consumer unit? in the Electrical Wiring, Theories and Regulations area at ElectriciansForums.net
They all have the same, I just put N/A.Absolutely. I have the same one as you, IR, R1+R2. Either do it right or don't bother, there is no need anyway!!
Why do you want to disconnect all the fittings, just do IR to earth.Completely off topic, but we switched a like for like light fitting in a shop, and the management company now want a minor works - ffs the job took 20 minutes, the test would take about 3 hours after I had disconnected the other light fittings for the insulation test, done all the tests and then reconnected them (which would then mean I potentially could of introduced more faults / loose connections).
Sometimes the insistence of a minor works is a bit silly - fair enough if you are altering the circuit (as they are designed for) but just for a like for like replacement? What rot!
Do you have a standard pro-forma for socket/switch/FCU etc swaps, with "N/A" in all the boxes?They all have the same, I just put N/A.
Just thinking about it, if you are changing a socket on an RFC, the only test worth really doing is a continuity test at the CU in case one of the conductors has snapped when you screwed it back on, but you don't do that?What tests? I only put whats relevent. Zs, ocpd, rcd test if present, whatever. I don't do IR or R1+R2. It takes a couple of minutes to change a socket, I charge for an hour, plenty of time to fill out a MWC.
Well I assume you do some tests, what do you do with the results?Do you have a standard pro-forma for socket/switch/FCU etc swaps, with "N/A" in all the boxes?
I am losing the will a bit here. If I gave most of my customers a MWC for changing a socket they would roll it up and throw it at me.
Shhh - being pedantic 'cos that what it asks for on the minor works formWhy do you want to disconnect all the fittings, just do IR to earth.
Note the Zs (and RCD if applicable) results on the job sheet and file it for 7 years then shred it.Well I assume you do some tests, what do you do with the results?
Not a million miles away from what I do, only I note them on a MWC.Note the Zs (and RCD if applicable) results on the job sheet and file it for 7 years then shred it.
OK i will be honest, some might not. If a customer rings me with a broken socket, switch stuck or face cracked, for example. I will swap it out, do a continuity test at the socket while de-energised, do a Zs when back up. Check CU damage/bonding/earth. Make appropriate suggestions if relevant, charge for the swap. No MWC. Job was to swap socket, that's all, local handyman could have done it, legally.Well I assume you do some tests, what do you do with the results?
local handyman could have done it, legally.
And if a handy man was doing it he'd be required to complete a MWC if he was complying with BS 7671
Last time I gave a (admittedly elderly) customer a MWC for a minor job, they looked at me blankly, in a mild state of panic. "What do I have to do with this?" they said. "Oh just put it with all your other important household documents" I told them. "Is it an important document then?" he said, even more worried. What can you say? For a socket change?And if a handy man was doing it he'd be required to complete a MWC if he was complying with BS 7671
And if a handy man was doing it he'd be required to complete a MWC if he was complying with BS 7671
Reply to New socket on ring main - replace consumer unit? in the Electrical Wiring, Theories and Regulations area at ElectriciansForums.net