Can anyone please advise what, if any, of the following would need to be certified by a Part P electrician, and what I could DIY? I've looked at zone diagrams and read lots of info but some of it seems contradictory and some confusing.
1) Replace a single ceiling pendant light fitting with 4 downlights. These would be IP65 rated downlights, the ceiling is 240cm high, but one of four the lights would be within 90cm of a shower head (horizontally, not vertically, and outside the shower enclosure).
2) Replace a SELV extractor fan with a 240v fan. Due to remodelling, the fan location is no longer in any 'zone' so I'd like something more powerful that actually removes moisture. I would remove the old fan and its wiring from the transformer in the loft and wire in the new one. There is currently no isolation switch for the fan, and it is on a lighting circuit that is not RCD protected. I don't think this matters if changing like for like, but strictly would this still class as like for like?
3) Adding a shaver socket into a cupboard, spurred from the lighting circuit. Not within any zone, lighting circuit not RCD protected. This is a 'nice to have' and I'd probably only bother if I had to get an electrician in for either or both of the first two anyway.
Thanks in advance.
1) Replace a single ceiling pendant light fitting with 4 downlights. These would be IP65 rated downlights, the ceiling is 240cm high, but one of four the lights would be within 90cm of a shower head (horizontally, not vertically, and outside the shower enclosure).
2) Replace a SELV extractor fan with a 240v fan. Due to remodelling, the fan location is no longer in any 'zone' so I'd like something more powerful that actually removes moisture. I would remove the old fan and its wiring from the transformer in the loft and wire in the new one. There is currently no isolation switch for the fan, and it is on a lighting circuit that is not RCD protected. I don't think this matters if changing like for like, but strictly would this still class as like for like?
3) Adding a shaver socket into a cupboard, spurred from the lighting circuit. Not within any zone, lighting circuit not RCD protected. This is a 'nice to have' and I'd probably only bother if I had to get an electrician in for either or both of the first two anyway.
Thanks in advance.