L
loz2754
The term PAT testing has been a misleading misnomer from the start.
Apart from the obvious grammatical error - Portable Appliance Testing testing....
It has always been the case that certain types of electrical equipment fall between fixed wiring testing (which is often only done to the point of connection of equipment eg an FCU), and so-called PAT testing ("a hand drier is not a portable appliance") and so the equipment never actually gets tested at all.
Which is why the 5th edition of the Code of Practice for In Service Inspection and Testing of Electrical Equipment (ISITEE) has thankfully dropped all references to the term "PAT Testing".
In certain situations, mainly in workplaces, it is essential that all items of electrical equipment, fixed or portable, are subjected to a risk assessment, and if necessary, to regular inspection and/or testing.
Where an item of equipment is clearly subject to another set of regulations, for example fire alarm panels, then the risk assessment will show that to be the case, and it will state who is responsible for testing it and how often, and where the records are kept.
This risk assessment approach may take a while to catch on, but it is clearly the direction we are being instructed to follow.
Apart from the obvious grammatical error - Portable Appliance Testing testing....
It has always been the case that certain types of electrical equipment fall between fixed wiring testing (which is often only done to the point of connection of equipment eg an FCU), and so-called PAT testing ("a hand drier is not a portable appliance") and so the equipment never actually gets tested at all.
Which is why the 5th edition of the Code of Practice for In Service Inspection and Testing of Electrical Equipment (ISITEE) has thankfully dropped all references to the term "PAT Testing".
In certain situations, mainly in workplaces, it is essential that all items of electrical equipment, fixed or portable, are subjected to a risk assessment, and if necessary, to regular inspection and/or testing.
Where an item of equipment is clearly subject to another set of regulations, for example fire alarm panels, then the risk assessment will show that to be the case, and it will state who is responsible for testing it and how often, and where the records are kept.
This risk assessment approach may take a while to catch on, but it is clearly the direction we are being instructed to follow.