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EICR - does bathroom lighting outside zone 2 need to conform with IP rating and additional rcd protection?

Hi, I have received an EICR certificate with 2 C2s on bathroom lighting 1) Bathroom lighting does not conform to IP rating (note the lighting outside the zone based on published zoning guidance (low voltage spot light) but inspector insisted on ignoring the zoning guidance) 2) Bathroom lighting circuit is not connected to an RCD also supplementary bonding is not visible. 

Questions- 1) Are the C2s legitimate? As a layman, I find it difficult to understand why the inspector insisted on ignoring the bathroom zoning regulation (my ceiling is actually higher than most of the newer flat) . 2) Also how do I find out whether there is supplemental bonding in the bathroom lighting circuit (nothing is visible outside) - does it really warrant a C2 if I cannot prove that there is supplemental bonding (the lighting in my bathroom is low voltage (I don’t know what is the voltage but it is very dim) and is located outside zone) . 3) If the C2s are legitimate, how can I fix the issue with minimal cost? 

many thanks for your time in advance.

Parents
  • I wonder if the eagle eyed have noticed something else? The incomer appears to be 3 core SWA (old colours) but where is the armour (see 5.16 on form)? This suggests that there is a central position with all the meters, and presumably the position of all the extraneous parts bonding (if any) and an easily accessed fuse whose rating is unlikely to be the 100A stated, providing protection of the submain which he says is 16mm2 (main Earth conductor, thus undersized! Now the hard question, would I expect this to be present within the flat too, as there is one 10mm2 in the CU Earth bar as far as I can see? How was this inspected because I would expect at least a note about it. The flat heating is also interesting, perhaps central, perhaps gas, or perhaps just a single heater or perhaps that is an immersion water heater? Then there are all the ticks on metering equipment and bonding all being present and the correct size, interesting. Yet he complains that the bathroom bonding cannot be verified!

    This is definitely an inadequate EICR, with all the paperwork from a scheme. I wonder about the qualifications of the QS and the Inspector. It needs to be taken much further.

  • the heating is centrally provided - we receive something called CHP bill based on a meter in the flat.

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  • the heating is centrally provided - we receive something called CHP bill based on a meter in the flat.

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