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WHY CANNOT AN ELECTRICAL ENGINEER BE A QS.

It would appear that the IET EAS document now requires a QS to be an NVQ qualified electrician.

In the same way a building surveyor needs to be professionally qualified person who does not need to be a bricklayer but needs to know how bricks should be laid why cannot a professionally registered electrical engineer with an 18th Edition Qual. and C and G 2391 with maybe a Level 4 2396 design qualification be a QS?

The so called competent person schemes do not register electricians. They only register “enterprises” which have to have a single assessed person who is responsible for the technical standards in the company. It would appear a spotty faced youth with an NVQ 3 with minimal experience can be a QS but a Charted Engineer with decades of experience cannot be?

Before you ask I was the NICEIC PDH and  QS  for my own company for 15 years up until last year.

I would be interested in your views? 

 

 

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  • John Peckham: 
    The QS does not have to engage in the installation work so does not need to be an electrician. The QS is responsible for the technical standard of the work and as it says on the tin “supervise”.

    I think that sums it up pretty well.

    I would say that the designer and QS need to be able to determine what is to be achieved and to be assured that it has been; whilst the electrician needs to know how to put it in. So for example a 10 sqmm cable is specified from a CU to a shower, but fishing it through a void or down inside a stud wall is the electrician's problem.

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  • John Peckham: 
    The QS does not have to engage in the installation work so does not need to be an electrician. The QS is responsible for the technical standard of the work and as it says on the tin “supervise”.

    I think that sums it up pretty well.

    I would say that the designer and QS need to be able to determine what is to be achieved and to be assured that it has been; whilst the electrician needs to know how to put it in. So for example a 10 sqmm cable is specified from a CU to a shower, but fishing it through a void or down inside a stud wall is the electrician's problem.

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