D
Deleted member 9648
EICR's increasingly bother me and have resulted in the odd sleepless night. Simply because in testing and inspecting a complex installation that is unknown to you it is not possible to check everything and the one thing you miss might be the very thing that caused fire or electrocution. Not only do I not want that on my conscience ,I also don't want m'lud waving the 'satisfactory' report with my sig on it in my face before sending me down simply because I missed something.
Today I was installing a couple of emergency lights under a mezzanine floor in a factory. All the existing lights were fed from a 4 way steel wylex DB, immediately below the DB was 2ft of 2x2 steel with a 9 gang M/C grid switch at the bottom. Trunking not bolted to either the DB or the switch box....and NO cpc from the DB to either the trunking or the switch. Continuity tested from DB out of interest, as I suspected.....zilch.
6" to the left of the DB was an NICEIC approved contractor test sticker dated Nov 2015
You couldn't make it up.
(But clearly they did)
Today I was installing a couple of emergency lights under a mezzanine floor in a factory. All the existing lights were fed from a 4 way steel wylex DB, immediately below the DB was 2ft of 2x2 steel with a 9 gang M/C grid switch at the bottom. Trunking not bolted to either the DB or the switch box....and NO cpc from the DB to either the trunking or the switch. Continuity tested from DB out of interest, as I suspected.....zilch.
6" to the left of the DB was an NICEIC approved contractor test sticker dated Nov 2015
You couldn't make it up.
(But clearly they did)