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T

thekingiam

Q25. Considering Regulations 134.1.1 and 510.2 which require equipment to be installed in accordance with instructions provided by the manufacturer, are installers now required to check torque settings for connection tightness at consumer units where these are manufacturers’ instructions.

Yes. It is necessary to check that all connections are tight, and any specific installation instructions must also
be followed.

does this mean i have to invest in a torque wrench, does it have to be adequately insulated.
can i use the one i used on my car .?.
or do they mean just check tight connections?

New or rewired domestic and similar installations : Electrical Safety Council
 
Q25. Considering Regulations 134.1.1 and 510.2 which require equipment to be installed in accordance with instructions provided by the manufacturer, are installers now required to check torque settings for connection tightness at consumer units where these are manufacturers’ instructions.

Yes. It is necessary to check that all connections are tight, and any specific installation instructions must also
be followed.

does this mean i have to invest in a torque wrench, does it have to be adequately insulated.
can i use the one i used on my car .?.
or do they mean just check tight connections?

New or rewired domestic and similar installations : Electrical Safety Council

No they do torque screwdrivers mate, Wiha, Wera, Schnieder all do them! And all new stuff comes with a torque rating in the instructions and it must all be torqued up to the correct rating with a calibrated tool :)
 
I wouldn't get uptight about this. Yes we have to follow manufacturers instructions, and my belief is that they have specified a torque so they wont carry the can when someone leaves a tail screw loose and it all melts. This is a good example of the application of common sense over ruling everything else.

Cheers..........Howard
 
Does that then mean we have to go back every month to check the torque settings are still correct? :lol:

(tongue in cheek)
 
i was thinking would i also need a tool for checking the torque on those edison screw in bulbs?
gives me an idea for a quick patent (all i need is a chinaman selling light bulbs to insist on a torque setting in hus instructions and get it into next regs)
 
maybe i have had too many strongbows...?
but i will use my previous post as evidence for copyright if any one starts selling torque screwdrivers that can torque lightbulbs safely.
i now feel strongly about this unsafe practice of tightening lightbulbs by hand and i hope the next regulations can put an end to this barbaric practice, before the short untimely death of one of these lamps.
 
maybe i have had too many strongbows...?
but i will use my previous post as evidence for copyright if any one starts selling torque screwdrivers that can torque lightbulbs safely.
i now feel strongly about this unsafe practice of tightening lightbulbs by hand and i hope the next regulations can put an end to this barbaric practice, before the short untimely death of one of these lamps.

It's already been done, screw lamps in with the weaker arm.
Check out Pat No. 376452890
 

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