Do I take that to be an answer to my question about 'legal action for pulling a DNO fuse'? If so, I'll be very surprised if anyone has an answer other than "no".With your caveat in place my answer is no
Kind Regards, John
Do I take that to be an answer to my question about 'legal action for pulling a DNO fuse'? If so, I'll be very surprised if anyone has an answer other than "no".With your caveat in place my answer is no
When I clicked 'post reply' this was the preceding postNo to what?
So to clarify I have known of prosecutions where 'other activities' have taken place. No I've not known of any where no evidence exists of anything other than a rewire.This discussion is all very well ('interesting'??), but has anyone actually heard of a case, at least in recent decades, when any legal action has been taken as a result of someone pulling a DNO fuse, per se (i.e. not including cases in which pulling of the fuse was associated with some other clearly illegal activity, like 'stealing electricity')?
Kind Regards, John
I think they tend to/tended to issue the "smacky bottom" letter rather than actual true legal redress in such casesWhen I clicked 'post reply' this was the preceding post
So to clarify I have known of prosecutions where 'other activities' have taken place. No I've not known of any where no evidence exists of anything other than a rewire.
I'm not sure how far back in history one has to go to find examples of that, but I have to say that I haven't heard of even that happening in recent decades - and the cutout seals are broken in a significant proportion of the properties I see (in variably explained by "that's how it was when I moved in"!)..I think they tend to/tended to issue the "smacky bottom" letter rather than actual true legal redress in such cases
You seem to imply that electricians (hence presumably 'everyone') are under some obligation to report broken seals but, if that is the case, 'where does it come from'?.... A week or so later I received such a we will rip your arms and legs off if you ever do it again letter. .... Ever since I have always reported such things ...
Well John, I would think that if were about to work on something/near it/associated to it and you do not report it prior or whilst working on it then an assumption might be made you did the bad deed. I know there`s always been some who will just remove the seal and connect your new meter tails to the meter, there`s bee some who will bypass the meter. The honest amongst us who do not but then notice that, for some reason, seals are missing would likely report it whilst we are working there in order to deflect any chance of blame. So I suppose that "obligation" actually comes from oneself. A C Y A excersize in realityYou seem to imply that electricians (hence presumably 'everyone') are under some obligation to report broken seals but, if that is the case, 'where does it come from'?
Kind Regards, John
That sounds more like it, since, as I implied, I found it very hard to believe that any externally-imposed obligation could exist. It would really have to be 'in law'', since there is no contractual agreement between electricians and the DNO which could impose 'obligations'.Well John, I would think that if were about to work on something/near it/associated to it and you do not report it prior or whilst working on it then an assumption might be made you did the bad deed. .... So I suppose that "obligation" actually comes from oneself. A C Y A excersize in reality
Despite the phrase being thrown about a lot, I don't think that "without the use of a tool" appears very often (if at all?) in the regs, and there certainly in no definition of 'what tool', how violently the tool is used or how much damage is done. Let's face it, with appropriate use of appropriate tools, one could expose live conductors which were contained in any enclosure.If the blank was glued in place it could not be removed without tools (or without destroying either the blank or the consumer unit) Would that then comply? I think it should but I'm not sure.
OK fitting a blank from another make may not comply with type testing, and some clip in stuff can be removed without a tool, so does not comply, but it will do until you can get some proper stuff.
Largely true - but, as I recently wrote, at least some of us have a modcuim of common sense to fall back on.manufacturers supply a variety of blanks , very few are of a sensible type ... then there are the views of the CPS’s , their inspectors and the internet. ...
it’s just a load of incoherent garbage
Largely true - but, as I recently wrote, at least some of us have a modcuim of common sense to fall back on.
You have my sympathies. The regs are certainly far from perfect, and definitely not always consistent with common sense, ,and the CPSs impose them on their members.I’ve got it in spades thankfully, but this puts me at odds with my CPS and the compilers of the regs
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