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Inspection & Testing

I work for a water company in the waste water capital procurement section. We engineer and purchase new waste water works for the company, employing consultants and contractors to design, build and test all of the new structures, plant and equipment. My role is project management and as the client we receive electrical inspection and testing paperwork (NICIEC) for the new works. 

I have a dregree in electrical/electronic engineering and would like some formal training, which highlights the requirement for the testing, how to interpret and check if the paperwork is correct?

Any suggestions would be most welcome - thanks in anticipation.

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  • Sparkingchip: 
     

    The correct course would really be the Level 4 C&G 2400 Design, Erection and Verification, but that’s probably more than you have in mind.

    I think that's a spot-on observation. When I finished my electrical engineering degree back in 1992, the first thing I did was enrol in the predecessor [well, probably distant ancestor] to this … C&G240 … to get some recognition of the practical experience I already had.

    It was 10 weeks of night school, and included a design project, practical examination of initial verification (and if I remember some fault-finding but not quite to the detail of the 2391 I did back in 2007), and a 3-hour, closed-book, examination covering design, erection, and inspection & testing.

    Number of people passing the course was excruciatingly low, around a third if I remember correctly.

Reply
  • Sparkingchip: 
     

    The correct course would really be the Level 4 C&G 2400 Design, Erection and Verification, but that’s probably more than you have in mind.

    I think that's a spot-on observation. When I finished my electrical engineering degree back in 1992, the first thing I did was enrol in the predecessor [well, probably distant ancestor] to this … C&G240 … to get some recognition of the practical experience I already had.

    It was 10 weeks of night school, and included a design project, practical examination of initial verification (and if I remember some fault-finding but not quite to the detail of the 2391 I did back in 2007), and a 3-hour, closed-book, examination covering design, erection, and inspection & testing.

    Number of people passing the course was excruciatingly low, around a third if I remember correctly.

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