Yes - the lights and the socket outlets would be.But according to your interpretation, the only things which can be connected on a fused spur without notification are lights and socket outlets. And these would still be exempt from notification without the reference to fused spurs in 2(c)(ii).
But the fused spur itself would not be.
Don't try to imagine all sorts of complicated "I wonder what they meant by that?" interpretations - just read the words as written.
No it wouldn't.And again, a fused spur which feeds only lights or socket outlets would be non-notifiable anyway.
A fused spur is not a light.
A fused spur is not a socket.
Exemptions from notification which apply to lights and sockets do not apply to fused spurs.
It's so that you can add the fused spur itself without it being notifiable.So what is the point of exempting any other fused spur itself from notification if, as you claim, it's then notifiable to actually connect any other load directly to it?
No you wouldn't, because you would be installing something which was neither a light nor a switch nor a socket outlet.If you were adding one of those to feed lights or socket outlets, then you would find a match in 2(c)(i) or 2(c)(ii) of Schedule 4 without the explicit reference to fused spurs being there.
If I put a light switch for a bathroom light outside the room, is that switch notifiable because of what is downstream of it?So you don't think that anything connected to the load side of an FCU is an integral part of the fused spur? I wonder if anyone else reading this thread agrees with that definition.
No it wouldn't - an FCU is neither a light nor a socket.And just like adding an FCU to feed lights or sockets would be included in the scope of the non-notifiable work.
Without it you could never add an FCU without notifying.So if, as you claim, connecting anything else to the load side of the FCU other than lights and sockets makes the work notifiable, then the reference to a fused spur in 2(c)(ii) would be almost completely redundant.
No it wouldn't, because an FCU is neither a light nor a socket.Adding an FCU to feed lights or sockets would already be exempt by the other provisions in 2(c)(i) and 2(c)(ii) respectively.
It's not "my definition" - it is simply what Schedule 4 clearly and unambiguously says.If connecting any other load to the FCU were notifiable, then according to your definition of a fused spur being just the supply cable and the FCU itself, the only thing exempted by the explicit reference to a fused spur in 2(c)(ii) would be if you wanted to spur off an existing circuit, fit the FCU, but then not connect anything to it.
And the point of it is to allow you to add an FCU to an existing circuit etc without it being notifiable.
If you then use the FCU to supply a light not in a kitchen etc, then the entire job is non-notifiable.
If you then use the FCU to supply a socket not in a kitchen etc, then the entire job is non-notifiable.
But without the ability to add the FCU in the first place....
No.So again, you don't consider that the cable on the load side of an FCU forms a part of the fused spur?
Indeed it is.I'm not disputing that. The dispute is the fact that subject to meeting the requirements of 2(a) and 2(b) as well, a fused spur is exempted by 2(c)(ii).
The fused spur is.
Not also any electrical equipment known to man which you might then decide to connect to it.
Whether they should or should not is one thing.And why should that not be what the regulations say?
Another thing, entirely separate, is that they do not. And more than one opportunity for the legislators to change what they say has arisen, and gone by without them changing them.
If you're keen on the concept of "I wonder what they really mean me to do - how should I interpret what they wrote in a way other than what they simply wrote in order to arrive at what they really meant" maybe you should reflect that every such opportunity not taken indicates that what they really meant was what they actually wrote.
Whether it should or should not is one thing.....There is already a "blanket exemption" for adding lights or sockets to an existing circuit. Why should the same principle not apply to a load hardwired to an FCU, or via an FCU and a switched flex outlet or similar?
That's the exemption for lights.If you were running lights from it, you would exit on the exemption in 2(c)(i).
You have yet to find an exemption for the fused spur.
Keep reading.
That's the exemption for sockets.If you were running socket outlets from it, you would exit on the exemption in 2(c)(ii).
You have yet to find an exemption for the fused spur.
Keep reading.
Q: Do you find an exemption for the fused spur before you hit the end of Schedule 4?
a) YES
b) NO
If you answered (a) please show me where it is.
If you answered (b) do you now see why "and fused spurs" is in 2(c)(ii)?
But without "and fused spurs" is in 2(c)(ii) you could not add a fused spur to supply non-notifiable sockets or non-notifiable lights.If you were connecting anything else to it, then the work would be notifiable. Which is what you are claiming it would be anyway with the reference to fused spurs included.
No it wouldn't, because the <whatever> is the <whatever>, it's not a fused spur.And if the "whatever" is not notifiable by virtue of being "work which consists of adding" it, then the provision of the FCU would not be notifiable anyway, without the explicit reference to a fused spur in 2(c)(ii).
Inconsistencies?No. But then as I've maintained ever since seeing the first version of the Part P regulations in 2004, the list of notifiable vs. non-notifiable jobs is full of such inconsistencies anyway.
I think not.
Please show me one.
Note - something which you think makes no or little sense, such as adding sockets in a utility room being non-notifiable whereas adding them in a kitchen is not is not an inconsistency between different provisions.
No - yours creates ones which were not there.My interpretation of what constitutes a fused spur throws up such inconsistencies. So does yours.
Mine creates none.
Nobody, but generally speaking "it just seemed daft and illogical to me, m'lud" isn't a good defence.But who expects these sort of government regulations to be logical in every respect?