Hi Guys
can anyone help out here, I've just been to look at a lighting fault in a children's nursery which I've now sorted but my question to you guys is:-
the building which was originally a NHS training centre that was renovated and converted 18 months ago by a "reputable builder" into a commercial Children's Nursery, the lighting and power supplies to several rooms have been modified to what extent I am unsure but the lighting circuits were originally micc cables from the early 1960's which the "electrician" has connected PVC to using choc block, the micc has developed live neutral faults and has shorted out.
my initial question is should the Electrician have installed rcd protection to the power and lighting circuits, bearing in mind the micc cables and metal conduit boxes are all 50+ years old, corroded and provide poor earths.
The same electrician wired the permanent live to both the emergency lights and toilet extractor fan using a single insulated brown cable (taken out of T+E cable) to the 32amp ring main circuit laid on top of a metal grid suspended ceiling (the brown cable was as you would expect on a quality installation made up in pieces jointed with choc block)
regards
Lee
can anyone help out here, I've just been to look at a lighting fault in a children's nursery which I've now sorted but my question to you guys is:-
the building which was originally a NHS training centre that was renovated and converted 18 months ago by a "reputable builder" into a commercial Children's Nursery, the lighting and power supplies to several rooms have been modified to what extent I am unsure but the lighting circuits were originally micc cables from the early 1960's which the "electrician" has connected PVC to using choc block, the micc has developed live neutral faults and has shorted out.
my initial question is should the Electrician have installed rcd protection to the power and lighting circuits, bearing in mind the micc cables and metal conduit boxes are all 50+ years old, corroded and provide poor earths.
The same electrician wired the permanent live to both the emergency lights and toilet extractor fan using a single insulated brown cable (taken out of T+E cable) to the 32amp ring main circuit laid on top of a metal grid suspended ceiling (the brown cable was as you would expect on a quality installation made up in pieces jointed with choc block)
regards
Lee