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"potentially dangerous" or improvement required re: missing covers on conduit inspection fittings

Taking in to account the guided definition of "potentially dangerous" and any IP rating compromise (and loss of mechanical protection):


If I proffered that missing covers/lids from a steel conduit inspection fittings was not worthy of being described as potentially dangerous, would you agree, or argue it was ?


Would you be persuaded one way or the other depending on the 'accessibility' factor ?


My take: if its out of the way from fingers etc, then i'd say not potentially dangerous. If it was readily accessible for touch/impact, then I would be thinking otherwise.


Reading back on some [I think] well known guidance regarding periodic inspections, there is a bit regarding where cable sheathing is not taken into an enclosure leaving the basic protected conductors exposed to touch; in some conditions it is considered as not "potentially dangerous" but only requiring "improvement" and from past threads this has provoked some interesting debate and opinions; is there a difference from these situations to the above missing lids question (or even indeed trunking lid missing or unused cable access holes in trunking) ?


Hope you are all keeping well and enjoying the 'new' forum ! :-)

Cheers

Habs
Parents
  • One informed opinion is from the NAPIT EICR Code breakers book - Section 5.4: There is lid missing exposing single insulated conductors. Code 2. And they reference 521.10.1.


    Personally I would give it a code 3 if it was in the office suspended ceiling for example / out of reach without the use of a ladder.
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  • One informed opinion is from the NAPIT EICR Code breakers book - Section 5.4: There is lid missing exposing single insulated conductors. Code 2. And they reference 521.10.1.


    Personally I would give it a code 3 if it was in the office suspended ceiling for example / out of reach without the use of a ladder.
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