The grey area is that if the new board is installed correctly and safely with current same size breakers how is anyone to know that it wasn't in that state when I bought house and still works correctly to the state that the new board was designed too
Because it's quite possible that the existing one isn't safe.
Remember you asked if it looked OK? Was "No" another one of the answers you didn't want?
What board would you recommend in this situation now
The one the electrician supplies.
What do I need to get Andy ?
Someone who knows what they are doing.
An electrician would be a good idea.
I agree entirely
Whatever route I go is my responsibility
And whatever happens to anybody else in a house with flaky electrics - is that also your responsibility?
All I want to know is the best setup for my needs which is why I'm asking advice of everyone
Dunno why, as you don't want to take the advice.
Replacing a CU is
not just like replacing a plug but with more connections to make.
You cannot assume that everything about the existing one is OK, or that all of the existing wiring is OK, and that you can just swap the CU over and end up with an installation which complies with the wiring regulations, or even works or is safe, and yet you'll be taking responsibility for the working and the safety.
- For a circuit to supply a load (doesn't matter what), how would you go about deciding what cable and protective device to use? You must not assume you can just copy what's there.
- How do you calculate maximum demand and how can diversity be used?
- What are the 3 different types of domestic single-phase supplies provided in this country, how would you recognise them, and what differences do each make to the requirements for the rest of the installation, particularly any outdoor supplies?
- Can you correctly identify all components and connections of a circuit by method of testing or otherwise? In doing so can you identify or recognise anything wrong or dangerous with the circuit?
- Do you understand how the way in which cables are installed affects how much current they can carry?
- What are the rules concerning cables concealed in walls, partitions and under floors?
- What are the rules for cables run outdoors, buried in the ground or overhead?
- Can you identify extraneous conductive parts, and do you know the requirements for main and supplementary bonding of them?
- Which circuits should be RCD protected?
- What will your RCD/RCBO arrangements be with respect to 314.1?
- How do you propose to isolate your supply so that you can connect up your new CU?
- Do you know what tests you would carry out on the installation - what sequence you'd do them in and at what point you would energise the installation, and for each test do you know what is being measured, why it is important, how you would carry out the test, and with what equipment, and what sort of results you would expect to get if everything was OK?
What testing will you carry out before you start the replacement?
The thing is, rewiring a house, even partially, installing new CUs, outside supplies, submains etc is not a trivial job, and I can assure you that it involves knowing far more than you think it does.
Asking questions here can be a useful part of a learning process, but they are not a substitute for proper structured studying. The key term there is "learning
process" - you cannot learn all the things you need to know just by asking questions here. It isn't structured enough - it won't provide you with a way to progress where each step builds on what you learned before.
You can't carry out a job of this magnitude by asking whatever random questions happen to occur to you. You've already shown that you are lacking a lot of fundamental knowledge - what if you get something wrong because you have no idea your knowledge is wrong? What if you miss something because you simply have no idea it even exists, and just don't realise you don't know it?
Please get an electrician.