I'm getting to the stage where I hope you are being awkward.
...and after breaking, would you have got a shock from the wires properly terminated in the connector block?
I suppose if you don't bite your nails, you could even tear off normal insulation.
Or merely the carcass of a plastic consumer unit. Were they Class II?
The definition only includes "supplementary insulation" - no thicker than the original, I presume.I find it hard to believe that it is as simple as that. If they just meant 'an insulating material', they would surely just say so - they have surely added "reinforced" for a reason?
Could you have received a shock before breaking it...How about 'chockboxes', particularly the opaque white (rather than transulcent) ones, which appear to be particularly brittle? I've just done this, just with my fingers (no tools) to one of them ...
...and after breaking, would you have got a shock from the wires properly terminated in the connector block?
It's you who keeps bringing up "reinforced". It was a second - supplementary layer.... do you really regard that as "reinforced insulation"?
I suppose if you don't bite your nails, you could even tear off normal insulation.
So would a plastic exterior.Indeed. I said nothing about it preventing contact with live conductors. I was saying that it afforded 'protection against electrical shock' - which is the same language that the regs use.
Yes. If one can't get a shock from something, Why does it have to be Class I or II?Do you really mean that?
That additional layer only has to be the same as the first layer.'Basic protection' (e.g. the insulation of a 'single-insulated' cable) alone is not allowed, otherwise 'single-insulated' singles would be allowed. One has to have additional protection against electric shock, the two most common methods being double (or reinforced) insulation or an earthed metal barrier.
Or merely the carcass of a plastic consumer unit. Were they Class II?
A second layer.The hazard only "does not exist" (is deemed not to exist) if there is something acceptable in addition to 'basic protection' (if, indeed, there is 'basic protection').
You seem to prefer earthed metal covering to plastic, yet you don't seem keen on metal CUs.I really don't understand that.
Had it contained wires and connectors, it was, two faults were needed before a shock became likelyI am merely asking whether, for example, the chockbox that I have just shattered with my fingers is or is not, per BS7671, adequate protection against electric shock if it contains live parts .
Then it wouldn't have been double insulated, would it?(which may not even have 'basic protection')