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Board change

Former Community Member
Former Community Member
If a EICR has been carried out recently 4 weeks ago, if you change the board would you be required to carryout testing on all circuits or can you reference the EICR.
  • Former Community Member
    0 Former Community Member

     in larger installations that would be impractical so you would almost certainly look for ways to limit the testing beyond what had been worked on




    I agree Andy, but this should be accounted for at the initial pricing of the job and finding either a way to do this in a practical way, either at night or out of hours. The power has to go off anyway for the board to be changed over - I was preparing the bid for a few board changes at a hospital and it became rather complicated and we decided that it'd be wise to start testing things before we rip out the old board and replace with RCBO's so we could find the problems easier to start with and know what we were dealing with and not have to have the power off for longer than necessary. Anything that can't be tested after the installation of the new board should be noted down as a limitation with the details of said limitation recorded on a separate sheet.

    For domestic situations, I'd recommend testing the entire thing as there shouldn't be anything stopping you from doing so. I wouldn't class it as a "new" installation for the entire thing, but under the "Description and extent of the installation" I'd definitely mention that the circuits tested are existing and that the only change is the new board, breakers and characteristics surrounding it.


    - S



  • SScho:




    but in the case of just a board replacement, it will not be for the purposes of initial verification.






    I don't think you've quite understood... Where are you getting this information? You need to go over the process of initial verification when you change a board, exactly as you would when you have a brand new installation.


    The Regs state that you shouldn't use a minor works certificate for a board change, and that you should use the Installation Certificate (with the schedule of inspections and schedule of test results.)


     



     



    If a DB change, then on the first section of EIC [ where you have 3 tick box options] you do not tick "new"


    You need to go over the process of initial verification when you change a board, exactly as you would when you have a brand new installation.



    No. Initial verification has been and gone. The fixed wiring [ the final circuits, the existing ones ] were installed and certified before you were there....at initial verification of the , then , new installation.


    Yes, you have to do some verification when re-energising the circuits by virtue of DB replacement. But enough to demonstrate that things are no less safe than when you started.  That can be done in many ways..e.g..you may have an EICR as a point of reference....compare before and after and/or sample live tests before change...then a sample wander R2 dead before energising new DB]. The circuit schedules and inspection schedules [ model forms] are one size fits all. You do not have to fill them all in if some are N/A to what you have installed.


    The EIC is not really a good fit for a DB change, but that is all there is.


    There should be care that you do not take on any responsibility for stuff you did not actually put in [ the cables]. A statement in the extents along the lines of "no new wiring or circuits" will certainly help.
     

    Yes BS7671 makes a presumption that all is perfect in wiring land and that everything was initially new installed to standard and maintained as such throughout its life. But that never really happens, except in more monitored situations, like your Hospital for instance. Even then, some stuff will always be missed and there will always be errors that may or may not be picked up later. You can only do what is practicable under the circumstances.

  • No. Initial verification has been and gone. The fixed wiring [ the final circuits, the existing ones ] were installed and certified before you were there....at initial verification of the , then , new installation.



    Humm, not quite. The previous initial verification didn't include your new work did it? And that's the bit you're issuing the certificate to cover. Certificates can't cover existing parts of installations - there are EICRs (reports, not certificates) for that.


    Yes, you have to do some verification when re-energising the circuits by virtue of DB replacement. But enough to demonstrate that things are no less safe than when you started.



    You should be able to show that your new work complies entirely with current standards - and that the existing installation, where non compliant, is no less safe that it was before. You can't really skimp on the I&T of your new work.


       - Andy.

  • AJJewsbury:




    No. Initial verification has been and gone. The fixed wiring [ the final circuits, the existing ones ] were installed and certified before you were there....at initial verification of the , then , new installation.



    Humm, not quite. The previous initial verification didn't include your new work did it? And that's the bit you're issuing the certificate to cover. Certificates can't cover existing parts of installations - there are EICRs (reports, not certificates) for that.


    Yes, you have to do some verification when re-energising the circuits by virtue of DB replacement. But enough to demonstrate that things are no less safe than when you started.



    You should be able to show that your new work complies entirely with current standards - and that the existing installation, where non compliant, is no less safe that it was before. You can't really skimp on the I&T of your new work.


       - Andy.

     




    Good grief, the new work is the DB change. The final circuits are not new.

    ​​​​​​Do the applicable parts of the inspection schedule appropriate to the changing of db.

     


  • Alcomax:




    AJJewsbury:




    No. Initial verification has been and gone. The fixed wiring [ the final circuits, the existing ones ] were installed and certified before you were there....at initial verification of the , then , new installation.



    Humm, not quite. The previous initial verification didn't include your new work did it? And that's the bit you're issuing the certificate to cover. Certificates can't cover existing parts of installations - there are EICRs (reports, not certificates) for that.


    Yes, you have to do some verification when re-energising the circuits by virtue of DB replacement. But enough to demonstrate that things are no less safe than when you started.



    You should be able to show that your new work complies entirely with current standards - and that the existing installation, where non compliant, is no less safe that it was before. You can't really skimp on the I&T of your new work.


       - Andy.

     




    Good grief, the new work is the DB change. The final circuits are not new.

    ​​​​​​Do the applicable parts of the inspection schedule appropriate to the changing of db.

     


     




    LOL.  I was thinking it was just me.


    Gary


  • Good grief, the new work is the DB change. The final circuits are not new.



    Sorry, I'm sure we're getting at cross purposes here...


    I'm not trying to suggest that the final circuits are new - quite the contrary. The point I'm trying to make is that the new work does include the first 6 inches (say) of the existing final circuit cabling - where the cables have been removed from the old CU, wiggled about all over the place and re-terminated into the new CU. There is a possibility of introducing faults into the existing circuits during that process - whether it be loosing earthing due to a bad connection to the earth bar (screw biting down on the sleeving rather than the conductor) or the old wires snapping off inside the sleeving, insulation being damaged (or existing unnoticed damage now resulting in an actual fault against the new metal CU case) or even reverse polarity (perhaps where connected to an RCBO) - so the new I&T needs to somehow show (AFARP) that such faults haven't been introduced.


    I'll admit that situation might be confused by the current fashion of dead testing final circuits while they're disconnected from the CU (e.g. by choc blocking L and PE together for a R1+R2 test thus not checking what's probably the most critical single connection - rather than linking L to the earth bar) - at least the 17th onwards insists that insulation tests be done with the c.p.c.s connected to earth. Not helped of course by some RCDs having to be disconnected during insulation tests, nor the lack of emphasis of 'overall' tests on the completed CU (despite the wording of the actual regulations). I'm sure the switch to metal CUs will catch out a number of situations that whet unnoticed with the old insulating CUs.


    So I'm not saying you need to do a full set of tests over the entire existing final circuits - but some testing will be needed. Perhaps a loop test at the first convenient point on each outgoing circuit (to check earth continuity & polarity) - perhaps preceded by a R1 continuity check if you think there's any risk of a live loop test posing a hazard if the c.p.c. wasn't intact.  An insulation test certainly - even if it's just a global L+N to PE test on the completed board.


      - Andy.

  • AJJewsbury:

    An insulation test certainly - even if it's just a global L+N to PE test on the completed board.




    I agree that an IR test is necessary, but completely messed up by USB sockets which have to be excluded, which is a particular problem in RFCs.