Hi All,
I'm working towards NICEIC domestic installer and have two jobs lined up, neither of them straightforward and could do with some advice on a couple of things.
First one is on a minor installation, simple replacement of a damaged pendant in the upstairs lighting. The house is c1970s with TNS supply and has three seperate old style rewirable fuse boxes, one for outbuildings, one for storage heaters and one for the main house. From reading the regs, pretty much everything needs to be protected now by an RCD, and on the basis that I can't see that the lighting circuit wiring is less than 50mm from the surface of the walls/ceiling and I can't see any metal sheathing on it I need to add in some RCD protection. The client does not want me to replace the existing consumer unit due to cost and its only the one circuit I'm altering, so I'm thinking that the cheapest way to provide RCD protection would be to take the feed from the existing fusebox with it's 6A fuse and pass this through a very small (4 way) consumer unit with RCD. Is there an easier/better way?
Second question is on a consumer unit replacement on a TT system. All the tests come up good or marginal other than insulation resistance on the sockets ring main which is a fairly appalling 500K. The client doesn't want me to spend hours tracing the fault, in this situation, do I have to find the fault or do I simply sign off the consumer unit as ok as this is what has changed and note the insulation resistance on the departures section of the cert?
thanks in advance
Matt
I'm working towards NICEIC domestic installer and have two jobs lined up, neither of them straightforward and could do with some advice on a couple of things.
First one is on a minor installation, simple replacement of a damaged pendant in the upstairs lighting. The house is c1970s with TNS supply and has three seperate old style rewirable fuse boxes, one for outbuildings, one for storage heaters and one for the main house. From reading the regs, pretty much everything needs to be protected now by an RCD, and on the basis that I can't see that the lighting circuit wiring is less than 50mm from the surface of the walls/ceiling and I can't see any metal sheathing on it I need to add in some RCD protection. The client does not want me to replace the existing consumer unit due to cost and its only the one circuit I'm altering, so I'm thinking that the cheapest way to provide RCD protection would be to take the feed from the existing fusebox with it's 6A fuse and pass this through a very small (4 way) consumer unit with RCD. Is there an easier/better way?
Second question is on a consumer unit replacement on a TT system. All the tests come up good or marginal other than insulation resistance on the sockets ring main which is a fairly appalling 500K. The client doesn't want me to spend hours tracing the fault, in this situation, do I have to find the fault or do I simply sign off the consumer unit as ok as this is what has changed and note the insulation resistance on the departures section of the cert?
thanks in advance
Matt
