What are your thoughts on people wanting to be ultra neat when wiring inside boards? | on ElectriciansForums

Discuss What are your thoughts on people wanting to be ultra neat when wiring inside boards? in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

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I get wanting to do a good job but does being super neat inside a board really make it a better job?

I don't see any advantage to it aside from aesthetics and if it's something that's not seen then....what's the point in obsessing over how neat it all looks?

To me it's a bit like a kitchen fitter making sure all the feet on his cabinets point the same way even though plinth is going on and covering them all up.

What do you's reckon?
 
The most obvious reason is that it aides future works if each conductor in a circuit is readily identifiable, but there's a vast difference between taking pride in turning out neat work and obsessing over millimetre perfect placement of conductors.

Next would be the ease with which additions can be made - much easier to dress more circuits in a neat board, than negotiating your way through a birds nest.

I don't think the kitchen fitter analogy fits - that's more in line with ensuring plate screws are all oriented the same way, which, ironically, is much more common than fastidiously neat boards.
 
It’s all ended up being a bit of a YouTube beauty contest to some extent

IMO the most important thing is that it’s easy to maintain for the next person… enough slack, tidy correctly ordered conductors etc. this does mean neat, not a rats nest but probably doesn’t have to be quite as “beautiful” as some YouTube examples.
 
[ElectriciansForums.net] What are your thoughts on people wanting to be ultra neat when wiring inside boards?

So would you be happy to test this rats nest that was done a couple of months ago?
And has some obvious faults without looking properly, the original installer wouldn't sign it off and then wouldn't answer the customer's emails calls or texts, mm wonder why!

I was going to attach a picture of one I did a week or so ago for a comparison but it will not have it!

Personally I will always do a neat job of everything I do, it's why I get so much repeat business.
Take pride in your work, do it once and do it properly!
Sy
 
View attachment 109245
So would you be happy to test this rats nest that was done a couple of months ago?
And has some obvious faults without looking properly, the original installer wouldn't sign it off and then wouldn't answer the customer's emails calls or texts, mm wonder why!

I was going to attach a picture of one I did a week or so ago for a comparison but it will not have it!

Personally I will always do a neat job of everything I do, it's why I get so much repeat business.
Take pride in your work, do it once and do it properly!
Sy
Apart from some of the copper conductors being proud of the breakers, there is nothing “wrong” with it.
I agree that it could and probably should be neater but would it make it any safer?

part of me is playing the devils advocate
part of me is thinking conductors in the right holes, screws done up correctly, testing and certification in place, what’s the problem?
 
@James
Neatness wouldn't make it any safer, but.
Hidden in there are some 1.0mm cables protected by 20mcb's and some 2.5mm radial circuits on 32a mcb's.
As well as cables left to fit and not enough spare ways for them.
There are also lighting circuits in with socket circuits it's a bit of a mess, there is also the RCD's maximum allowed leakage to consider, that's a lot of lights and sockets to hang off two RCD's.
And none of it is labeled properly.
I couldn't leave a job I'd done looking like that and walk away a happy contractor!

@freddo
I have no idea why it says that!
 
@James
Neatness wouldn't make it any safer, but.
Hidden in there are some 1.0mm cables protected by 20mcb's and some 2.5mm radial circuits on 32a mcb's.
As well as cables left to fit and not enough spare ways for them.
There are also lighting circuits in with socket circuits it's a bit of a mess, there is also the RCD's maximum allowed leakage to consider, that's a lot of lights and sockets to hang off two RCD's.
And none of it is labeled properly.
I couldn't leave a job I'd done looking like that and walk away a happy contractor!

@freddo
I have no idea why it says that!
Hmm i take all your points and you are right but...does any of that actually get impacted by the wiring not being nice to look at?
 
Neatness and logical routing of conductors can help their identification and tracing and thus purpose which in turn may reduce errors at the time of wiring and later when say inspecting and testing. Neatness also suggests care and pride in a job well done and not rushed to complete.
 
Last edited:
For me I have always viewed doing a consumer unit as the one chance to really show your skills at doing a neat tidy job.
It doesn't have to be perfect but cores cut to a nice length and dressed in neatly , the correct sized sleeving used , tails neatly dressed in etc all make it easier for the next person to work on the board and hopefully keep it neat.
If you start with a rats nest and people add to the rats nests you just end up with a bigger rats nest and eventually your work ends up on here being called a complete rats nest
[ElectriciansForums.net] What are your thoughts on people wanting to be ultra neat when wiring inside boards?
 
I find that RCBO present a problem in being neat due to the connection to the N bus-bar. While not OCD I do like to make sure that visually the cabling in a consumer unit is presented in a way that is crystal clear to anyone following and doing additions or alterations. Being orderly and careful, matching terminal numbers on each circuit et. allows checking on your own work being made much easier. Besides which when EICR comes around and seeing a well wired box inspires (potentially!) the feeling that the installation has been in the hands of someone competent.
Then there is the element of taking a pride in your work, which I think the devil is in the detail. When initially starting out wiring fifty years ago the only test we used to do is megger the installation. Don't tell anyone, we also used to use an incandescent element lamp to test earth by placing L + N then L + E, if the bulb was brighter with the L + E, jobs a goodun! Sorry but that was how it was that long ago. The point being, with such poor testing compared to todays requirements, there was a stong emphasis on terminating and neatnes and being sure that your installation techniques were very studiously executed to obviate a poor megger reading, or any other problems associated with poor connections.
 
View attachment 109245
So would you be happy to test this rats nest that was done a couple of months ago?
And has some obvious faults without looking properly, the original installer wouldn't sign it off and then wouldn't answer the customer's emails calls or texts, mm wonder why!

I was going to attach a picture of one I did a week or so ago for a comparison but it will not have it!

Personally I will always do a neat job of everything I do, it's why I get so much repeat business.
Take pride in your work, do it once and do it properly!
Sy
To be fair that DB/CU looks tight as hell
 

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