New Consumer Box advice please

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I'm planning on having a new consumer box fitted to my house by a qualified electrician, the house was built 1963 and a check on the wiring shows it as plastic. We had it checked before we moved in safety wise and it was deemed ok. I note however that there is no earth wire to any of the lighting switches and they are metal back box. All the pendants are plastic and relatively new My question is can I still have a new consumer box fitted without having to rewire the light switches.
 
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I'm planning on having a new consumer box fitted to my house by a qualified electrician, the house was built 1963 and a check on the wiring shows it as plastic. We had it checked before we moved in safety wise and it was deemed ok. I note however that there is no earth wire to any of the lighting switches and they are metal back box. All the pendants are plastic and relatively new My question is can I still have a new consumer box fitted without having to rewire the light switches.
The ideal would obviously be to have the lighting circuits re-wired.

However, provided that all the lighting switches (as well as all the light fittings) are themselves plastic, your electrician may well be happy to replace the CU with things as they are. The metal back boxes for the switches are not, in themselves, much of an issue, since they are not usually touchable, and if there are concerns about the screws (holding the switches onto the boxes), the could be replaced with nylon ones or perhaps 'screw covers' utilised.

The bottom line is that you obviously need to discuss this with any electrician you are contemplating getting to replace the CU.

Kind Regards, John
 
The metal lights switch back boxes should have nylon threads in them if fitted in 60s
Thus not a concern
 
Hi there, no they don't they are just metal threads metal screws but can a consumer box still be fitted without having to rewire.
 
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Interesting about the nylon threads, I've looked at back boxes on toolstation and screwfix and can't find any boxes that have nylon threads
 
Thats cus they would have only manufactured them in the 60s
As they weren't required in the 70s when light circuits had earth wires
 
can a consumer box still be fitted without having to rewire.
Yes, but don't be surprised if not all electricians are prepared to do it.

BS7671 is mostly written as a set of requirements for new installation work and pay relatively little attention to how to deal with existing installations that are not compliant with current standards.

Replacing the protective device protecting a circuit implies taking on a level of responsibility for the safety of that circuit.

There is guidance from respected organizations (for example https://www.electricalsafetyfirst.org.uk/media/2146/bpg1.pdf ) that says it is acceptable to reconnect a lighting circuit with no earth if the customer refuses to get it rewired and there are no metal fittings/accessories and that in such cases a warning label should be placed.

but ultimately that is just guidance, each tradesman is responsible for covering their own ass and a large part of that is deciding what situations they will or will not get involved with.
 
I'm planning on having a new consumer box fitted to my house by a qualified electrician, the house was built 1963 and a check on the wiring shows it as plastic.
I presume you mean the Consumer Unit is plastic.

You do not have to replace it and there is no benefit in replacing it just because it is plastic.


As for the unearthed lighting circuits, they (or rather you) will benefit from a new CU with RCDs if you don't have them already.
 
I presume you mean the Consumer Unit is plastic.
I suppose you may be right, but I confess that I took it to mean that the wiring was 'plastic' (i.e. PVC) - which is what I look "... a check on the wiring shows it as plastic" to mean.

Maybe I was wrong!

Kind Regards, John
 
As for the unearthed lighting circuits, they (or rather you) will benefit from a new CU with RCDs if you don't have them already.
Only marginally, I would have thought. Given that unearthed lighting circuits should not supply anything with an exposed-c-p, the only protection an RCD would be likely to give (in relation to such a circuit) would be in relation to people who were injudiciously 'fiddling with' parts of the circuit's wiring whilst they were 'live', wouldn't it?

Kind Regards, John
 
Perhaps "respected" isn't quite the right word but (as much as some people may dislike them) the reality is that many of the organizations involved in the production of that guide are many of the same organizations that are responsible for either setting electrical safety standards or approving people to self-certify electrical work.

And at least the NICEIC link the best practice guides on their websites, for example https://www.niceic.com/contractor/essentials/downloads
 
Perhaps "respected" isn't quite the right word but (as much as some people may dislike them) the reality is that many of the organizations involved in the production of that guide are many of the same organizations that are responsible for either setting electrical safety standards or approving people to self-certify electrical work.
I wouldn't argue with any of that, and I do not doubt that they are primarily well-intentioned (and often/usually sensible), even though they cannot be blind to the fact that their guidelines can sometimes have the effect of 'generating work' for their members.

However, I think one of the problems with 'guidelines' from these trade organisations (which I suspect their members are obliged to follow) is that, in the eye of 'outsiders' they can sometimes appear to be 'requirements', even when they actually go beyond what would be required to satisfy (the 'minimum standard' of) BS7671.

Kind Regards, John
 

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