Within, and only within, the context of Schedule 4, what are those inconsistencies and superfluities?
The fact that by your interpretation the presence of the reference to fused spurs in 2(c)(ii) doesn't exempt anything which would not be exempt without that reference, other than, perhaps, the fitting of a fused spur which doesn't actually have any load connected to it.
But by your version of what "fused spur" means, even that isn't exempt if the fused spur extends beyond the FCU, e.g. to a flex outlet plate which is being fitted in anticipation of a future addition of some appliance.
And equally, no opportunity has been taken to change the wording of the two clauses in 2(c).
Maybe because they're happy that it's correct.
Maybe. If they think that unclear wording in which words obviously aren't being used to mean the same as they mean elsewhere within the same document is "correct" and doesn't need improvement.
If the intent is that a fused spur may be installed only to feed additional sockets or lights, then why not say that?
If that was the intention then saying that would be superfluous, as sockets and lights are already mentioned, as they would have to be for scenarios not involving a fused spur.
Yes, sockets and lights are mentioned explicitly, because they need to be so mentioned to be exempt when connected on a
non-fused spur. So if the reference to a
fused spur is
not intended to exempt something
other than sockets and lights on a fused spur, why does there need to be a reference to fused spurs at all?
It makes no sense to say that the reference to fused spurs is there to allow for the connection of sockets and lights on a fused spur, because additional sockets and lights are
already exempt explicitly, for
any type of spur.
I don't think it needs to be, it just is. Maybe they structure legislation like that to make it easier to insert amendments later on.
Doesn't change the meaning.
It makes the various and inconsistent use of conjunctions add to the confusion though. "And" as used within 2(c)(i) and 2(c)(ii) is clearly not meant to convey the same precise meaning as "and" used to join 2(a), (b), and (c), otherwise adding a light without also adding a switch would be notifiable, and adding a socket without adding a fused spur would too. I would suggest that "lights and switches" in 2(c)(i) should really say "lights
or switches" and that "socket outlets and fused spurs" in 2(c)(ii) should be "socket outlets
or fused spurs." They used "or" between 2(c)(i) and 2(c)(ii), because clearly the intent was not that lights could be added only if sockets were being added too, or vice versa. So why the confusing, and conflicting use of "and" within 2(c)(i) and (ii)?
And applying your argument, what work is exempted by the inclusion of the reference to fused spurs in 2(c)(ii) which would not be exempt anyway if they were not so referenced explicitly and would therefore be just as ancillary as any other cable, junction boxes, and so on?
The addition of a fused spur to a socket circuit in a kitchen to supply an existing socket currently on a different circuit.
How does the reference to a fused spur in 2(c)(ii) exempt the addition of a fused spur within a kitchen when the condition in 2(a) would not be satisfied?
The FACT is that fused spurs are NOT classed as "ancillary". No matter how much you think they could, or should be that FACT will not change.
The fact is that the regulations don't talk about ancillary equipment and fittings at all. We're just taking it that installing cable, for example, is taken as being exempt in conjunction with the specific work which is listed a non-notifiable, otherwise it would make absolutely no sense at all because
everything would end up being notifiable anyway, unless the cable just happened to already be in place.
I am not trying to establish whether there was or was not any logic or consistency in the principles they applied when devising the regulations - there's no point, because no matter how flaky, the regulations are what the regulations are, so we can do nothing but proceed with how they ARE and read them in a way which is internally consistent with what they ARE.
Well, perhaps we can agree that there was little logic or consistency in drawing up the list of notifiable vs. non-notifiable jobs at least, which is what I've said ever since seeing the first proposals of them in 2004. Yes, they are what they are, but it's the interpretation of what they are which is the problem.
And if the reference to fused spurs were not present in 2(c)(ii), adding sockets would still be explicitly exempt, whether on a fused spur or a non-fused spur.
If if if....
Yes, because posing a "What if" question might give a
reason for something being included. If adding something to the rules did not change the final meaning of those rules, then there would be no point in adding it. If adding a reference to fused spurs in 2(c)(ii) did not change anything about what would be notifiable compared to the version of 2(c)(ii) without such a reference, then adding that reference would serve no useful purpose.
Schedule 4 says what it says, and there is no way to arrive at what it means as written by speculating on what it might mean if it were written differently.
Unless you accept the reasonable assumption that things are added to it for a reason. If adding something changes nothing, why add it?
So again, what exemption has that reference to fused spurs added if, as you claim, a fused spur is non-notifiable only if feeding lights or sockets?
Where have I claimed that?
O.K., so you've accepted that one can add a fused spur which consists of the cable and an FCU. Without being able to connect something to that FCU without notification (sockets, lights, and switches excepted), what useful purpose would that serve?
As I said before, the only possible use to which that exemption could be put would be something like a case of a room being refurbished and the owner making provision for some appliance to be connected at a future, as yet unknown, time.
I've said all along that a fused spur is a discrete item.
But it isn't. A fused spur comprises multiple items, the precise number depending upon the nature of the fused spur.
The definition as used throughout the electrical industry in this country since the term first came into use.
In the document under discussion, e.g. the Building Regulations? There isn't one.
So what are we to assume that "fused spur" in those regulations means, if the regulations themselves don't make a specific definition which can override any other definition?
Because I believe that a fused spur is an FCU.
Then you believe incorrectly. An FCU might well be used to create a fused spur, but a fused spur is
not just an FCU. Just try and find anything in BS7671, the former IEE Wiring Regs. etc. which defines it as such.
Which I guess could be something other than the BS 1363 type accessory we all know and love, but I've never seen anything else. I wonder if a fused 3-gang socket counts as one?
Well, that would be exempt anyway! But I would say that it would count. As would fitting a BS1363 (or indeed any type) of fuse module in a grid along with some other accessory. One could even use a small DIN-rail box with a BS1361 fuse carrier, however rare such a use might be. The result would still be the creation of a fused spur - And at the very least that includes all the cabling downstream of the fuse as far as the point of utilization.
Doesn't matter, whatever it is, it is, and it is a discrete item. It is one thing which you add to a circuit, and as we are both agreed the cable(s) supplying it are what we have come to call "ancillary".
Whatever you connect to it is also a discrete item. It is one thing which you add to a circuit, and as we are both agreed the cable(s) supplying it are what we have come to call "ancillary".
And what about the cable on the load side of the FCU or other means of providing fusing? What if I run a spur to an FCU, then continue with a cable to a box which is blanked off in anticipation of a future addition of a "whatever" at that point. You've said before both that the fused spur
is the FCU, or that the fused spur
stops at the FCU.
So do you consider that this job would be notifiable, because of the cable I've run from the FCU to a box? Or do you think it's still non-notifiable because of that load-side cable being an ancillary accessory which is a necessary part of the job of installing the fused spur?
So you can connect a new cable to the JB in the kitchen ceiling which the kitchen lights are on, and that is not work in a kitchen because it's going off somewhere else, but you could not connect a new cable, going off somewhere else, to an FCU in the kitchen wall because that is work within a kitchen?
A junction box in the ceiling void isn't within the kitchen. The FCU on the kitchen wall is.
I thought you said that cables were ancillary, and they gain their exemption from notification by virtue of the item you're installing - in this case a light in a conservatory?
I said that we're assuming that cable are ancillary, in terms of being a necessary part of installaing additional sockets, lights, or other non-notifiable items. But that is still all subject to the requirement of 2(a).
What if you ran a cable from a room below the kitchen, up through a safe zone in a kitchen wall and into a room above the kitchen and added a socket there? Would that be notifiable?
No, because there is still no work being done within the kitchen itself, so 2(a) is satisfied.
So chasing a wall in a kitchen and burying a cable in it is not work within a kitchen?
I was thinking in terms of fishing a cable up through the wall. But yes, I suppose if you are going to chase into a brick/plaster wall in the kitchen and then make good, it would be work in a kitchen. Depends where you define the limits of the kitchen to be, I guess. Is it the surface of the wall? A certain depth below the surface? A point midway between the finished surface and the surface on the other side?
What about the situation with the hall socket? If you choose to kneel in the kitchen and work under that floor to ad a JB does that make it notifiable whereas if you kneeled a few feet away in the hall it would not be?
Well, I think we'll agree that that would definitely be absurd! It has to be based on where the electrical materials are being installed, not on where one stands, sits, lies, crawls, etc. in order to install them.
The socket you are adding is in the hall, and therefore not notifiable, and I thought you were happy that the cable supplying it was "ancillary", and got its notifiable status from the socket you were installing? You said above that connecting a conservatory light to a kitchen light would be non-notifiable.
But in this case the kitchen socket is clearly within the kitchen, so surely connecting anything into that socket would constitute work in a kitchen, and thus fall foul of 2(a)?
But then you also said that connecting a conservatory light to a kitchen FCU would be notifiable.
Again, the FCU would be within the kitchen and subject to 2(a). Fitting a junction box into the lighting circuit in the void above the kitchen would not count as work within the kitchen. Unless you want to apply some "midway" definition of where the limits of the kitchen end, e.g. a point halfway between the top of the kitchen ceiling and the bottom of the floor below.
I'm trying to show, with considerable success, that you're not very good when it comes to looking at things consistently.
It's hard to apply consistency to an argument when there is no consistency and preciseness in the regulations to begin with.
The regulations in schedule 4 don't actually mention FCU's at all, they refer to fused spurs, of which an FCU will form a part.
Again, a fused spur is not just an FCU.
What is it then?
The cable supplying it is "ancillary", so it can't be that as well.
Yes, it is. If you run a cable from an existing ring to an FCU, then that cable forms part of the fused spur. As does the cable on the load side of the FCU. The fact that we're regarding the cable as being ancillary material implicitly included in certain exempt works doesn't alter that.
Go into a wholesaler, ask for a fused spur, see what they give you.
Go into many places these days and ask for an RJ-45 jack and see what they give you. It doesn't mean that what they are mistakenly calling an RJ-45 jack and what they give you is
actually an RJ-45 jack.
Give an electrician a box full of cables, FCUs, sockets, light switches, luminaires, smoke alarms, fans, panel heaters, flex outlets, junction boxes, ceiling roses etc. Ask him to pass you a fused spur - see what he digs out for you.
Ditto. Colloquial mis-application of a term does not alter what that term
really means.
Think about who the civil servants would have consulted when drafting the regulations, and when they told them "fused spurs", what they meant by that. (Note - a meaning consistent with what's actually written in Schedule 4 would be handy...)
You mean all those in the U.K. electrical industry, who know that the IEE/BS7671 definition of a fused spur has always included more than just an FCU?
So if I run a cable from, say, a hallway to a utility room, and that cable is surface run in trunking on the wall of the kitchen, do you think that it would satisfy the requirement of 2(a) as being work not in a kitchen?
I do.
Don't you?
Arguments over cables buried in walls aside, surely a cable run on the surface of a kitchen wall has to count as work within a kitchen? It is the fitting of electrical apparatus within the kitchen. We're talking about a cable which would, other than its location, be assumed to be non-notifiable as a necessary part of work carried out under an exemption in 2(c), but 2(a) specifically says that work in a kitchen is notifiable (unless it falls under some other exemption, such as replacement of accessories etc.).
So faced with a choice between a definition which is in very common use, particularly among the people who would have been asked what should go into Schedule 4 (or 2B as was),
As noted above, those within the industry who would have been consulted should be fully aware of what "fused spur" is taken to mean, given the way it's been used for at least half a century. Just because others use the term loosely and rather incorrectly to refer to a specific item which is used in creating a fused spur would hardly be a good reason for them to throw out the proper definition.
If they intended the exemption in 2(c)(ii) to refer to a fused connection unit alone, and not the complete fused spur, don't you think they would have
written "fused connection unit" instead? Or do you really think that those in the industry, knowing that they were writing something for official legal purposes, just decided that it was better to misuse a term which has been clearly defined for decades, and avoid using another term - "fused connection unit" - which would make their intended meaning perfectly clear? I don't think so. If they wrote "fused spur," then it's because they
meant "fused spur" - As has been the IEE's accepted definition of the term for at least half a century.
Not much point ever trying to get you to look at this logically, is there? You and logic are total strangers.
So
logically, why do think that those who are rather intimately familiar with BS7671 would just take a term which has been in use in official (or at least semi-official) use for decades and decide to make it mean something else?
There's no mention of non-fused spurs in Schedule 4, so they are not relevant to a discussion of what Schedule 4 means, but within the context of Schedule 4, and without involving items previously agreed to be ancillary, and without creating any new inconsistencies or superfluities with respect to what's already there, can you tell me what you think a non-fused spur might be?
It's the same thing as a fused spur, but without the fuse. Simple, really.