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STANDARD SPECIFICATION FOR PERIODIC INSPECTION AND TESTING OF ELECTRICAL INSTALLATIONS IN DWELLINGS

I have produced a standard specification for the periodic inspection of fixed electrical installations in dwellings.


The intention is landlords, councils, housing associations and individual home owners of potential buyers can use this to invite contractors to perform this task. Is intended also to give contractors a level playing field to tender against.


Contractors can also send it to their potential clients to fulfill their obligation to define the extent and limitations of the inspection and testing. They can then put in those 2 boxes "see attached specification".


It is a MINIMUM specification and contractors can do more if they wish.


It is free from me and copies can be obtained from info@astutetechnicalservices.co.uk

This is not a cunning marketing exercise for my company as I am not looking for any inspection and testing work..


Let me know what you think?





Parents
  • "Standard Specification for Periodic Inspection ...in Dwellings"  =  what you agreed with the Client in advance.

    Anything else is not achievable with a format as prescribed by BS7671.

    Any attempt to do so will simply be out maneuvered by people simply making it all up and inviting you to prove a negative after the event. The veracity or otherwise of what is produced will be exactly the same as present outcomes.


    That people are referencing this oven-ready "Satisfactory EICR"  and bemoaning the lack of a suitable sum for "doing it properly"- what ever doing it properly is- indicates that something else separate to an EICR is required for rental dwellings and most likely dwellings generally. It requires something simple, prescriptive and brutal; a bit like a car MOT. Its framework should not be related in any way to rules applicable to new works; so the bulk of BS7671 will likely not be relevant. The fundamentals of Chapter 13 would help form the requirements, but the pass/fail precipice would be the laws of electrical theory and a minimum requirement of what is safe and what is not. With this approach you would likely have to form the requirements to have a fairly brutal "deemed to be safe" high bar. So, just for example, absolute minimums would be 30mA RCD upfront of the lot ? Protective earth bonds that are truly accessible [regardless they being required or not, they just have to be there], where you can detach each end to prove they are real and continuous; no exposed live parts, no damaged accessories,no damaged switch-gear, no burning or melting, ADS present on each circuit and a CPC present on all circuits.


    The above would be one or two pages of A4 with very minimal information, preformed/standard limit to what degree things are assessed, making it clear this is very different territory to your historical periodic inspection; it is an overview to a tight remit . Likely just tick boxes...a bit like Gas Landlord Safety Certificates. 2 hrs tops in and out for your standard 3 bed terrace. If it fails, you charge for a revisit, do enough so that the relevant boxes gets a tick rather than a cross and re-issue the "cert". I suppose the outcome can be a simple choice "adequate safety" or "inadequate safety". It would be called "Electrical Safety Cert".


    You could limit this brutal new regime to Installations that have gone native. There are quite a lot of them. The ones that could be spared are perhaps new builds that do have a provable BS7671 paper trail [ likely also building regs trail]. These could be subject to the usual BS7671 Periodic Regime. However, thereafter, many agencies may well have got used to the new brutal assessment, so on the new "Electrical Safety Cert"  there can be an additional section that states the date of original EIWC , any subsequent BS7671 certs or EICRs. These will supersede the more brutal requirements dished out to Installs that have "gone native", allowing the boxes to be ticked. These BS7671 certs/reports referenced would have to be 100% available at all times.


    It could be quite a satisfying, sadistic approach to Installations that have the audacity to not have been designed, installed and constructed to BS7671. Look at it as being a form of punishment.

Reply
  • "Standard Specification for Periodic Inspection ...in Dwellings"  =  what you agreed with the Client in advance.

    Anything else is not achievable with a format as prescribed by BS7671.

    Any attempt to do so will simply be out maneuvered by people simply making it all up and inviting you to prove a negative after the event. The veracity or otherwise of what is produced will be exactly the same as present outcomes.


    That people are referencing this oven-ready "Satisfactory EICR"  and bemoaning the lack of a suitable sum for "doing it properly"- what ever doing it properly is- indicates that something else separate to an EICR is required for rental dwellings and most likely dwellings generally. It requires something simple, prescriptive and brutal; a bit like a car MOT. Its framework should not be related in any way to rules applicable to new works; so the bulk of BS7671 will likely not be relevant. The fundamentals of Chapter 13 would help form the requirements, but the pass/fail precipice would be the laws of electrical theory and a minimum requirement of what is safe and what is not. With this approach you would likely have to form the requirements to have a fairly brutal "deemed to be safe" high bar. So, just for example, absolute minimums would be 30mA RCD upfront of the lot ? Protective earth bonds that are truly accessible [regardless they being required or not, they just have to be there], where you can detach each end to prove they are real and continuous; no exposed live parts, no damaged accessories,no damaged switch-gear, no burning or melting, ADS present on each circuit and a CPC present on all circuits.


    The above would be one or two pages of A4 with very minimal information, preformed/standard limit to what degree things are assessed, making it clear this is very different territory to your historical periodic inspection; it is an overview to a tight remit . Likely just tick boxes...a bit like Gas Landlord Safety Certificates. 2 hrs tops in and out for your standard 3 bed terrace. If it fails, you charge for a revisit, do enough so that the relevant boxes gets a tick rather than a cross and re-issue the "cert". I suppose the outcome can be a simple choice "adequate safety" or "inadequate safety". It would be called "Electrical Safety Cert".


    You could limit this brutal new regime to Installations that have gone native. There are quite a lot of them. The ones that could be spared are perhaps new builds that do have a provable BS7671 paper trail [ likely also building regs trail]. These could be subject to the usual BS7671 Periodic Regime. However, thereafter, many agencies may well have got used to the new brutal assessment, so on the new "Electrical Safety Cert"  there can be an additional section that states the date of original EIWC , any subsequent BS7671 certs or EICRs. These will supersede the more brutal requirements dished out to Installs that have "gone native", allowing the boxes to be ticked. These BS7671 certs/reports referenced would have to be 100% available at all times.


    It could be quite a satisfying, sadistic approach to Installations that have the audacity to not have been designed, installed and constructed to BS7671. Look at it as being a form of punishment.

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