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Blanki g cooker isolation under sink to pass EICR

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If I get electrician to oin the cooker cables and blank box off with blanking plate.

The circuit is on its own supply with rcd protection.

If this is done is this compliant to pass EICR ?
 

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As said, what's actually wrong with it?
Are you concerned it's under a sink?
If so, don't be.
You can get leaks ANYWHERE.
 
You could ask a mate of a mate of a chap down at the pub, like many do. It might be deemed slightly inaccessible by some. Unless the around the sink is leaking then what is the problem? If your kitchen is under the bathroom on the floor above are not any water risks far far greater?


It is not a good idea to google artifical stupidly or fake book etc for proper answers from armchair warriors and conspiracy theorists or people who have paid to get their own books published.
 
AI slop which mostly creates stories some people might believe.
I don't think there is anything particularly 'intelligent' about things produced by Chat GBT (any more than there is with so many of the things now being called "AI") - since, on the whole, it is merely collecting and collating things from the internet that have been written by humans.

It's therefore probably primarily 'human slop'- but, nonetheless, still slop ;)
 
It’s just a way of collecting more darter (emphasis on pronouncing the proper British way rather than the American way so many folk do) it is not intelligent is it?
 
darter (emphasis on pronouncing the proper British way rather than the American way so many folk do)
You have that back to front!

In Star Trek: The Next Generation, the character Mr. Data's name is pronounced "Day-ta" (with a long "a" sound), and he corrects others who use a different pronunciation.
A well-known scene from the show addresses this directly:

Dr. Katherine Pulaski: "Dah-ta, look at this."
Lt. Commander Data: "My name. It is pronounced 'Day-ta'."
Dr. Pulaski: "Oh? What's the difference?"
Lt. Commander Data: "One is my name. The other is not."

The in-show explanation for the specific pronunciation is that it is simply how he prefers his name to be said. The real-world reason is that actor Patrick Stewart used the British pronunciation "Day-ta" during the first script read-through, and that version stuck for the series, overriding the original production guide which called for the American "Dah-ta" pronunciation. This influence is thought to have even changed the common pronunciation of the word "data" in American English.
 

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