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Neptune

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I've had invaluable advice from this forum in relation to EICR's and clarifying my understanding that just because the consumer unit is "old", it does not need to be replaced. Since then, I had the EICR carried out at my rental property. This went to plan.

I am now scheduling my next EICR on a separate property and this has an even older Consumer Unit but everything works and seems safe e.g. no cracked fittings or exposed cables from my pre-inspection checks.

My question: will this type of Consumer Unit be okay to produce a satisfactory EICR?

Thanks in advance.
 

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User friendly or not, I thought the idea was to reduce the number of C2 or C3's on the EIRC?(improve safety) Adding plug in MCBs doesn't really deal with those.
Also, is this a ground floor flat with a garden? Any sockets which could be used outdoors is a C2. As is (if you got by the guidance innthe codebreakers book) not having RCD protection for cables buried in walls less then 50mm deep.
There was something in the report about end user ease and I thought the plug-in breakers may help with that i.e. not having to replace a fuse wire if there is a fault. I appreciate that this doesn't play the role of a RCD.
This is not a ground floor flat.
 
There was something in the report about end user ease and I thought the plug-in breakers may help with that i.e. not having to replace a fuse wire if there is a fault. I appreciate that this doesn't play the role of a RCD.
This is not a ground floor flat.
Honestly, technology and safety devices have improved a great deal since that unit was fitted. Cough up the ÂŁ500 and bring it up to modern standards.
 
As the landlord for a few rental properties... if it was my studio flat... I'd be replacing it with an all RCBO board... job done ! No worry, concerns, stress... no thoughts about what happens the next time there's an EICR, and I could sleep well at night...
This. It's only 6 circuits, a nice little "Fusebox" board, tidy job!
 
No you don’t Need EICR. Just an EIR.
Pete

Despite agreeing with you that a complete new satisfactory EICR isn't stipulated in the legislation I'm finding that Letting Agents ask for it , they don't grasp this properly and it's easier to just do it I find, after all you already have all the test results.
 
Despite agreeing with you that a complete new satisfactory EICR isn't stipulated in the legislation I'm finding that Letting Agents ask for it , they don't grasp this properly and it's easier to just do it I find, after all you already have all the test results.
Depressingly, that is probably true.

Still the OP has a satisfactory EICR before any new board, so that particular dumbassness is covered.
 
Update: checked with the electrician and it's a dual RCD board that he has priced me for. there will also be capacity for any additional circuits in the future.
Based on your advice, I am inclined to go for this.
Nothing wrong with that plan at all.
Just my two cents - especially with only six circuits I'd ask for a quote for an "all-RCBO board" too. He'll know what you mean. The main benefit is any fault only trips the circuit concerned, so you'd just have a main switch and 6 breakers - in simple terms each breaker incorporates it's own RCD.
I wouldn't imagine it would cost a lot more. You'd still have room for more circuits in future.
I am bit biased - I do prefer fitting those especially for board changes!
But your original plan is fine too.
 

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