As others have said, that's appalling. It's contrary to the regulations and it, and the rest of his work, doesn't comply with Building Regulation 7.
He's also changed the consumer unit
Who is he registered with? Some schemes are limited in scope and they may not regard him as competent to replace CUs....
- how is it looking? Thanks
View media item 2884
It's looking worse and worse - as well as the non-compliances above, it is arguably unsafe, so that's
another contravention of the Building Regulations...
I'm having a kitchen installed and the fitter who is also the electrician and plumber (PART P qualified) has installed some of the sockets inside the kitchen units.
The thing is you can (and he almost certainly did) become "Part P qualified" on the back of a 5-day course, either run over 5 days or a longer period of shorter evening sessions at college, adding up to 30-odd hours.
Those courses may teach you a few things you didn't know beforehand, but don't bring about overall general improvements - if you're a crap workman when you start you'll still be a crap workman when you finish.
RF Lighting said:
Are there any other earth wires connected to the CU other than the one in the photo?
No, should there be?
Where do the earth cable from the CU and the clamp on the cable sheath run to? If they go to an earth block, and in that there are also cables which run to the incoming gas, water etc pipes then that's OK.
Take another photo...
RF Lighting said:
Those tails look a bit small aswell.
Sorry, I'm a lay person, what's a tail and what size should they be?
That's name for the cables that run from the fuse to the meter and the meter to the CU. 16mm² is OK if the main fuse is 80A or less.
securespark said:
Is that an earth clamp on the incoming cable?
It's attached to an old metal pipe that seems to house the cable - I think it was always there. Is that ok?
Probably - what method of earthing did the guy record on the certificate, and what values are shown for External Loop Impedance (Ze) and circuit Earth Loop Impedances (Zs)?
JACKC said:
You need to decide now if you want him to complete or get someone else in to sort out and pay them.
If I don't pay him and he goes to court shouldn't I show that I gave him the opportunity to put his work right?
Check with your CAB and/or a friendly solicitor, but I'm 99.99% sure that you do. The quality of his work is dreadful - I'm just a humble DIYer and I'd never countenance work like that, but I'm sure you do have to give him the opportunity to put it right.