That's why the assesor comes to visit every year and picks out two or three jobs at random to go and look at.
Not by the standards of the day, but things change, technological advances occur, standards improve.Is the re-issue a statement that 16th,15th,14th or even 10th was/is UNSAFE? No.
Not all.I like what I read in the 17th edition, its all pretty much common sense from a regs point of view
It may well be that you can't, but nobody is telling you that you may not. They are telling you that you must make reasonable provision in the design and installation of electrical installations in order to protect persons operating, maintaining or altering the installations from fire or injury.What I dont like is the part P requirement and definitions for "competent". If I want to install the electrics in my house, get the supplier to disconnect the supply so I can work on the CU, who are they to tell me that I cant?
When you get people who can't change light fittings without creating short circuits, don't have a clue about what the terms "load" and "supply" on an FCU mean, have no idea about how, where and why cables need overcurrent protection and don't even know the difference between switches and circuit breakers it's hard to agree that there should be no attempts to raise standards.Why we need further blocks to individuals fitting a new spur or ceiling rose is beyond me.
Who checks that the certified individual carries out each installation? How deep down this particular rabbit hole do you want to go?
What is to say someone is certified as "competent" actually carries out work that is within the regs once away from the tester?
They are also telling you that for non-trivial work you have to notify them so that they can check that you have complied with the above requirement. Leaving aside the distortion of putting kitchens on the same footing as bathrooms, that too seems like a reasonable idea.
Or do you think that there should be no legal standards applied to the design and construction of houses, and that anybody who buys one just has to take his chances that it won't kill him?
part p should never have been instead an electrical test should have been included in the hip packs when a house is to be marketed, no pass = no forsale sign
part p should never have been instead an electrical test should have been included in the hip packs when a house is to be marketed, no pass = no forsale sign
What ever happened to buyer beware? If someone wants to pay £100K+ on a house and not bother getting a proper survey done, then that's their problem. Thank God hips are going as well.
I've had three lots of professional electrical work done on my house and not one of them has followed the regs to the letter. Do I care? No, their work was safe and I've got a stupid piece of paper to say that it passed and that's all that counts. Ain't progress wonderful?
Who checks that the certified individual carries out each installation? How deep down this particular rabbit hole do you want to go?
What is to say someone is certified as "competent" actually carries out work that is within the regs once away from the tester?
[sigh...]
Mbga9pgf, you are deluded. You don't even have a proper name - it looks like the sort of user name that a troll might adopt. But what would I know, eh?
You don't understand because you don't understand and you almost certainly will not accept any answer that does not agree with your opinion.
That's fine, but I'm out of this one because it just sounds like you're here to stir up trouble.
So when you were advised to get certain things checked, what did you do, did you ignore them? have you got a boiler leaking carbon monoxide into your house??
Your conclusion is deeply flawed. The way that so many LABCs did their utmost to get out of doing anything regarding notifiable electrical work shows that the last thing that it was was a jobsworth creation.Which then leads me to the conclusion the only reason part P was introduced was yet another jobsworth creation scheme on behalf of the Labour government.
So do you think that the mere existence of standards is enough? That there should be no regime of checking that people comply with them?I have no issue with increased safety, which is already achieved in British standards. I have issue with the notification requirement.
This is Part P:Part P is nothing more than government enbuggerancing DIYers and creating jobs that are effectively worthless.
P1 Reasonable provision shall be made in the design and installation of electrical installations in order to protect persons operating, maintaining or altering the installations from fire or injury.
That's it in its entirety.
No its not.
This is part P in its entirety:
http://www.planningportal.gov.uk/uploads/br/BR_PDF_ADP_2006.pdf[/QUOTE]
No - that is Approved Document P.
Part P is a part of the Building Regulations.
It was originally created by Statutory Instrument 2004 No. 3210, The Building (Amendment) (No.3) Regulations 2004, which added this to the existing Building Regulations:
That was later amended by SI 2006 No. 652, The Building and Approved Inspectors (Amendment) Regulations 2006:
Leaving us with:
"Simply"?And it says that I have to submit an application simply to carry out a new installation.
The only people who think that new installations are simple are simpletons.
Since not one LABC welcomed Part P with open arms and went out and hired people in order to meet their new responsibilities this cannot be true.Jobsworth creation pure and simple.
There is none.I ask again, where is the evidence, empirical evidence, that Part P has improved safety?
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