S
Sue B
Hi Guys (and I assume that you mostly will be guys..),
A quick introduction, I have spent most of my adult life working overseas as an aid worker, so am pretty used to surviving "less than optimal" electrical installations. But the wiring in this house that I have just moved into does seem to lack a certain something...
Equi-potential bonding that is. There is one wire clamped to the input pipe at the gas meter (not connected to anything, but it's a start) - but I haven't found any others.
I followed the gas pipe into the outhouse with the central heating boiler. Loads of (copper) pipes - no (copper) wires clamped to any of them.
I looked under the kitchen sink - more copper pipes, followed by a few inches of plastic pipe going to flexible tap connectors. No wires, other than the flex going to the waste disposal (which doesn't work).
I looked in the bathroom - a free-standing oil-filled heater within reach of the taps, wired to a switch-fuse outlet screwed to the window frame. A non-electric heated towel rail. Under the sink - copper pipes but no clamps or wires.
I looked in the utility room - 2A and 5 A round-pin (remember those?) unshuttered sockets beside the sink and wired into the light circuit. 13A surface mounted sockets spurred off to somewhere. Copper pipes to the sink. You got it - no sign of bonding.
Ah, you will ask - are there any RCDs? - what sort of supply incoming bonding is there? I know not. I haven't found the electric meter or the consumer unit. I guess that they might be in the cupboard under the stairs, which I haven't been given a key to.
I have, I think the word is, "misgivings".
But before I engage in polite conversation with my landlord - anyone know what the legal position is, when it comes to rented property in Scotland?
IIUC, private houses don't *have* to have any equipotential bonding at all. A visiting electrician may easily refuse to do any work to the installation without bringing this up to standard as well - but that's about it. Rental properties may have to have a gas safety certificate but they don't have to have an equivalent electric one.
A quick introduction, I have spent most of my adult life working overseas as an aid worker, so am pretty used to surviving "less than optimal" electrical installations. But the wiring in this house that I have just moved into does seem to lack a certain something...
Equi-potential bonding that is. There is one wire clamped to the input pipe at the gas meter (not connected to anything, but it's a start) - but I haven't found any others.
I followed the gas pipe into the outhouse with the central heating boiler. Loads of (copper) pipes - no (copper) wires clamped to any of them.
I looked under the kitchen sink - more copper pipes, followed by a few inches of plastic pipe going to flexible tap connectors. No wires, other than the flex going to the waste disposal (which doesn't work).
I looked in the bathroom - a free-standing oil-filled heater within reach of the taps, wired to a switch-fuse outlet screwed to the window frame. A non-electric heated towel rail. Under the sink - copper pipes but no clamps or wires.
I looked in the utility room - 2A and 5 A round-pin (remember those?) unshuttered sockets beside the sink and wired into the light circuit. 13A surface mounted sockets spurred off to somewhere. Copper pipes to the sink. You got it - no sign of bonding.
Ah, you will ask - are there any RCDs? - what sort of supply incoming bonding is there? I know not. I haven't found the electric meter or the consumer unit. I guess that they might be in the cupboard under the stairs, which I haven't been given a key to.
I have, I think the word is, "misgivings".
But before I engage in polite conversation with my landlord - anyone know what the legal position is, when it comes to rented property in Scotland?
IIUC, private houses don't *have* to have any equipotential bonding at all. A visiting electrician may easily refuse to do any work to the installation without bringing this up to standard as well - but that's about it. Rental properties may have to have a gas safety certificate but they don't have to have an equivalent electric one.