H
holmslaw
Decided to start a new topic, cos the other one has turned into girlie squabbling between bas, softus and fingrinal.
I don't think anyone can logically argue against bas's interpretation, he is also correct that the building regs are the only applicable statutory standard.
However, I've taken the time to read the relevant sections of 16th, 17th and part p approved document. If these documents had stuck rigidly to the term "locations containing a bath etc" there would be no confusion. But they all variously mention "bathrooms" and it is at that point the situation becomes a nonsense.
I'll give one example - part p approved document says "In large bathrooms, the location containing a bath or shower is defined by the walls of the bathroom". This statement seems to be a direct contradiction of the building regs. In that it defines the "location" as the "bathroom", rather than "location within the zones".
If I were doing a bathroom tomorrow I would comply with the dimensioned zones, bonding and provision of rcd's to ALL circuits and I would not install ANY 13Amp sockets. The installation would then comply with the 16th, 17th, partp approved document and the building regs. And if the client has a problem with that, he can get someone else to do the job.
Try explaining to your stroppy adolescent daughter why she should not use her hair dryer in the bath, or sit her mains powered radio on the side of the bath, when 3mts away there is a 13A socket. OK, so its rcd protected, does it work, will it still be working in 10 years time - your guess is as good as mine.
I've always thought the 16th and 17th bathroom regs where a load of old b******s and I've never read, seen or heard anything to convince me otherwise.
What do you others think.
The definition of "special location" in The Building Regulations is not "a room with a bath or shower in it", it is a location within the limits of the relevant zones specified for a bath,
a shower, a swimming or paddling pool or a hot air sauna in the Wiring Regulations, sixteenth edition, published by the Institution of Electrical Engineers and the British Standards
Institution as BS 7671: 2001 and incorporating amendments 1 and 2.
I don't think anyone can logically argue against bas's interpretation, he is also correct that the building regs are the only applicable statutory standard.
However, I've taken the time to read the relevant sections of 16th, 17th and part p approved document. If these documents had stuck rigidly to the term "locations containing a bath etc" there would be no confusion. But they all variously mention "bathrooms" and it is at that point the situation becomes a nonsense.
I'll give one example - part p approved document says "In large bathrooms, the location containing a bath or shower is defined by the walls of the bathroom". This statement seems to be a direct contradiction of the building regs. In that it defines the "location" as the "bathroom", rather than "location within the zones".
If I were doing a bathroom tomorrow I would comply with the dimensioned zones, bonding and provision of rcd's to ALL circuits and I would not install ANY 13Amp sockets. The installation would then comply with the 16th, 17th, partp approved document and the building regs. And if the client has a problem with that, he can get someone else to do the job.
Try explaining to your stroppy adolescent daughter why she should not use her hair dryer in the bath, or sit her mains powered radio on the side of the bath, when 3mts away there is a 13A socket. OK, so its rcd protected, does it work, will it still be working in 10 years time - your guess is as good as mine.
I've always thought the 16th and 17th bathroom regs where a load of old b******s and I've never read, seen or heard anything to convince me otherwise.
What do you others think.