The law requires that people 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. You are telling them to do things which do not qualify as that.It is only your opinion that to do the things we're debating specifically here would be against the law. You still have not provided any citation which backs up that claim.
Go away.
The law requires that people 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. You are telling them to do things which do not qualify as that.You do not need an exemption from complying with something you are not obliged to comply with in the first place, so yes, it is up to them, so long as the result is reasonably safe.
Go away.
No, that's the difference between what used to be OK to be newly installed and is considered OK enough to be left alone and what is now OK to be newly installed.Again, that's the difference between what is regarded as reasonably safe and what they are suggesting as something more than that for new work. If they did not regard existing sockets without 30mA (or better) protection as reasonably safe, wouldn't you expect the guidance on inspections to demand a C2 or higher code?
Things change.
That's the way it works.
Get over it.
Then stop disputing that the Wiring Regulations have similar patterns.I don't dispute that.
Stop pretending that because they don't require something existing to be ripped out that they must therefore allow it to continue to be installed.
But not a 1970 one, even though it's not been allowed to build a new car without one for 37 years. It's considered safe enough to allow people to still use it, but not safe enough to allow new introductions of it. The fact that you are not required to add a mirror to an old car does not conflict with the fact that a new(er) one needs one.There is an offense of, say, driving a 1980 car on a road without the required outside mirror.
There is a contravention of the Wiring Regulations in ADDING new sockets without it.There is no offense of having sockets in your house, whenever it was built or rewired, without 30mA RCD protection.
In the UK, the Wiring Regulations are pretty much de facto legally binding.But they can ignore rules which are not legally binding on them. Whether you think they should or not doesn't change that. Get over it, and stop trying to use ridiculous arguments to suggest that somebody would be breaking the law when he would not,
In the case of RCD protection, the safety aspects are such that your proposed unreasonable and gratuitous ignoring of them means that you have NOT made reasonable provision etc.
Because it is the installation of the new socket that is under consideration, not the installation of the ones already installed.What does it matter whether it's one new socket without sleeving on the earth or the entire house?
It may never have been considered reasonably safe, but even if it was, things change. That's the way it works. What was allowed once may not be the same as what is allowed now, even if there's no compulsion to change what is present because it dates from a time when it was allowed. The fact that someone has existing things which pre-date a change which stopped them from being allowed to be installed does not mean that they can continue to install them.If it's reasonably in one socket, it's reasonably safe in all of them, regardless of how, when, or why it was done that way.
Because 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.Again, how can guidance about inspecting an existing installation for safety not be relevant?
There's a difference between what used to be OK to be newly installed and is considered OK enough to be left alone and what is now OK to be newly installed.Either it's reasonably safe or it isn't, no matter when it was done.
Things change.
That's the way it works.
Get over it.
There's a difference between what used to be OK to be newly installed and is considered OK enough to be left alone and what is now OK to be newly installed.I'm saying that it makes absolutely no sense to claim that no 30mA protection/cables not in safe zones/missing sleeving/whatever is not reasonably safe if done today when if exactly the same thing is present from some time in the past it is to be considered reasonably safe.
Things change.
That's the way it works.
Get over it.
TGFT, as long as you mean you are done with telling people not to bother following the current rules because you won't accept the fact that things change.And on that note, I really am done