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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
  • Please write to the NICEIC and Electrical Safety First, enclosing copies of your report (unredacted) and ask for an explanation of it, at the same time referencing this thread in the forum, pointing out that Inspection of Contractors, Competence, and Safety appear to be the last of their interests.

    Please report any outcomes to the Chair, WRPC at the IET (They should probably not be published here at this stage).

    All - I've received a comment from the IET Technical Regulations team that asks: 

    “Please don’t forward any documents to the Chair of WRPC at the IET. There is no policy nor procedure for dealing with submissions of this nature and the IET does not offer a consultancy service. Competent Persons Scheme providers have a complaints procedure to be followed in such cases. The person posting the comment did so as an individual and did not post on behalf of the IET."

    Lisa

  • Isn't it still one of our regular contributors anyway ?

    https://www.voltimum.co.uk/articles/iet-experts-breakdown-18th-edition

    Mike.

  • To be fair Mike I'm not sure if he's still the Chair as that article is dated January 2019. I'm not sure how regular the Chair changes for that particular committee? 

  • fair enough. And  is not

    https://electrical.theiet.org/courses-resources-career/free-resources/technical-support/

    a form of consultancy service?. I've never used it but I presume somebody answers the phone if you call it before half four on  Friday.
    M

  • That's a helpline and not a consultancy service Mike. Wink

  • Lisa, How is a helpline not a consultancy? After all, do we consult a helpline or not consult a helpline? Aw well silly me.

    I am not as daft as this though "

    The technical helpline

    The telephone service typically operates on the following days and times:

    T: +44 (0)1438 765599
    F: +44 (0)1438 765526

    Monday and Friday, from 9 am to 12 pm and 2 pm to 4:30 pm."

    12pm - there is no such time as 12pm or 12 am - we had it drummed into us a junior school, senior school and apprenticeship/FE.

    Ranks alongside Grocer his Apostrophe methinks

  • 12pm - there is no such time as 12pm or 12 am

    Not quite true ... I agree that neither of the monikers am (ante meridiem) nor pm (post meridiem) are valid at precisely the instant of noon or midnight.

    However, it's also true that the clock time in minutes is "12:00" for 1 minute, and therefore (because dt tends to zero):

    • at 12:00 ({midnight+dt}<t<{midnight+1minute-dt}) it's 12 am; and
    • at 12:00 ({noon+dt}<t<{noon+1minute-dt}) it's 12 pm.

    ... and that's Engineering Grinning

  • The use of "noon" and "midnight" avoids any confusion.

    One can certainly use "12:00" for noon, but because of the ambiguity of "00:00" on Saturday, for example, nothing ever happens then in military circles. Events happen either at "23:59" or "00:01".

  • However, it's also true that the clock time in minutes is "12:00" for 1 minute, and therefore (because dt tends to zero):

    One might equally well argue that it is 12 (am or pm) for a whole hour (to 2 significant figures).

  • One might equally well argue that it is 12 (am or pm) for a whole hour (to 2 significant figures).

    Absolutely, if you are using times that are truncated to the hour, rather than the example of a more common digital or analogue clock display often truncated at the minute resolution, the same logic persists.

  • next issue - what date does 12 midnight belong to? is it 31st of Dec or 1st of Jan for example , you`d have to specify both dates to inform the reader which midnight it was. If you just gave 12 midnight and one date it would be misleading 

Reply
  • next issue - what date does 12 midnight belong to? is it 31st of Dec or 1st of Jan for example , you`d have to specify both dates to inform the reader which midnight it was. If you just gave 12 midnight and one date it would be misleading 

Children
  • Well the main question in relation to time is "where does it all go?"

    I've been googling military time and there is no 2400, it reverts back to 0000 at the very stroke of midnight. This does away with any confusion about having to use two dates to pin down which midnight you are talking about, since 0000 on any given date is the very first thing in the morning. But as Chris said earlier, military like belt and braces solutions, so makes complete sense to do stuff at 2359 or 0001 instead