But relevant to somebody deciding whether he feels that it's worth the extra cost and/or trouble of complying with some new regulation for the small increase in protection it might provide, when that regulation is merely guidance and not a statutory requirement.
It is not up to somebody to decide whether complying with the law is worth the extra cost and trouble.
Is there any relevant guidance in the form of equivalent wiring regulations in the EEA which allows 100mA protection to be installed for new sockets?
And sometimes people are happy to do something which doesn't follow every last detail of those changes when they see that doing so involves a lot more work or expense for a very small increased level of protection.
That is also not up to them. There are no exemptions because they don't want the bother of complying.
The "authoritative guidance" in the very same publication also says that not having it is reasonably safe.
Do you not realise what you have been doing here?
You have been telling me that I must be guided by the fact that the regulations do not require the pro-active improvement of no, or 100mA protection, but you do not have to be guided by the fact that they do not allow it for new installations or additions.
Either it's reasonably safe by whatever criteria one is using to judge what is reasonably safe, or it isn't.
OK fine. For existing sockets? It's reasonably safe enough not to enforce the upheaval of having it replaced.
For new sockets? It's not reasonably safe enough to allow its use to be extended.
Whether it was installed today, yesterday, last year, or 30 years ago doesn't change that.
It changes what is considered acceptable for new stuff.
That basic principle is seen over and over and over again in all sorts of rules and regulations and laws covering all sorts of things. The rules etc change, there is a cut-off date and things made/done/installed after that date are subject to the new rules, but we do not force the application of the new rules onto things which were made/done/installed before that date.
IT'S THE WAY THINGS WORK. And you need to accept that, get over it,
and you need to stop telling people that they can ignore the new rules if they already have things which comply with the old ones.
If you were asked to inspect an installation to determine if it's reasonably safe, you came upon an obvious addition to a circuit feeding an obviously later socket without 30mA protection but you couldn't tell whether it was done before or after the BS7671 changes of 2008, would "Sorry, but unless you can give me the date on which that addition was done I can't tell you whether I consider it to be reasonably safe or not," be your response?
You just don't get it, do you.
What is considered safe to be allowed to be
left installed is NOT, ANY LONGER, AS IS QUITE CLEAR FROM THE REGULATIONS TO ANYBODY WHO IS PREPARED TO READ THEM, ALLOWED TO BE NEWLY INSTALLED.
I know you don't like that fact, but TFS.
I know that you would do anything to make it otherwise, but TFS.
Things change.
That's the way it works.
Accept it, get over it,
and stop telling people that they can ignore the new rules if they already have things which comply with the old ones.
The same guidance also says that Z is reasonably safe.
No it does not, not for newly installed stuff.
I refer you to your earlier reply to the question:
ban-all-sheds said:
PBC_1966 said:
Are you seriously going to suggest that if you install an accessory without putting sleeving on the earths that the result is not still reasonably safe?
Yes, I am.
I refer you to your statement:
But given that you are now claiming that even a missing piece of earth sleeving can mean that an installation is not reasonably safe...
You originally asked about the new cables installed without sleeving, not the entire installation.
Please don't tell me that all along you have been mistakenly thinking that P1 makes requirements wrt the existing installation in its entirety, rather than just any new parts which someone adds?
That's why the guidance on what is considered safe enough to be left is of no relevance - P1 applies to what you add, not to [what-is-already-there + what-you-add], so the only guidance which is relevant it that which applies to what you add.
And when you are carrying out that inspection for somebody to determine if the installation is reasonably safe, how are you going to know why there is no earth sleeving present? Are you, again, somehow going to postpone determining whether the system is reasonably safe or not until you can ascertain the reason? That's ridiculous. Either what you have in front of you is reasonably safe or it isn't, by whatever criteria you are using to judge "reasonably safe."
I refer you to my earlier observation about you not getting it.
What's ridiculous is your refusal to see that the guidance/rules/regulations/laws/whatevers apply only to the work you are doing. The acceptability of it is based entirely on its own merits, and is not affected in any way by what is already there. When done, what is examined, and measured against the guidance/rules/regulations/laws/whatevers, is just what you did, not the entirety of the installation with your bit included.[/quote]