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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.

  • Pretty good OM, there are quite a lot more given enough time!

  • Just a few observations from me;

    page 2-Next inspection-1 month

    this really winds me up. If all remedials are done, the report should give a reasonable time until next inspection. As it stands, another report is needed after the remedials are done

    page 3

    Agreed limitions- Agreed with no-one

    Supply protective device is a switch

    other sources of supply on page 7, which says N/A

    prospective fault current 949kA is HUGE

    rating/setting of device should be N/A as it is not settable

    page 4

    item 4.2 no mention elsewhere of loose CU

    item 4.4 should be C3, plastic CU

    item 4.15 should be N/A-plastic CU

    item 4.16 should be N/A- not required for fault protection, not TT and Zs within limits all circuits

    item 4.17 this is ticked but has given a C2 for no RCD in bathroom

    page 5

    item 5.11 e) shouldn't be N/A, should have a code

    item 6.1 b) ticked, but bedroom light not working?

    list of luminaires page 8, which says N/A so none inspected despite saying 20% in extent of sampling on page 3

    item 7.7 all N/A-should include those in bathroom

    item 8.1 a) says N/A, but has given C2 for this elsewhere

    item 8.2 says N/A but lights are ELV

    Note-his name hasn't been redacted at the bottom

    page 6

    live/live insulation resistance tests- should be N/A unless all loads disconnected. Lim on lighting circuit, "no access to spotlight connections" (page 3) , are all lights spotlights?

  • Thanks Kay76 very interesting. It has all the hallmarks of being entirely made up, because many items which should be N/A are ticked, the readings from measurements are not consistent ex. Circuit 5 (R1+R2 does not match alleged cable resistances) and appears to be an incorrect Zs value for the circuit, not matching the Ze value. I wonder at the Ze and actual supply arrangement too, where is your electricity meter? Do you pay the management company or the distributor directly?

    Regards

    David CEng etc.

  • Part 10. No. 8. RCD for low voltage circuits serving the location. "N/A" is not consistent with the C2 later on.

  • Hi David, thanks for your comment. In fact, I have notified my Management Office about the RCD finding and they are in the midst of talking to the in/house engineer as it seems quite onerous that all the settings of the bathroom in my development needs upgrading to be safe for occupation!

    I will redact the pages and post here. Thanks 

  • Many thanks for your advice. I am afraid you may be right. The inspector sounded very defensive every time I asked for basis of his assessment on the C2s.I was initially tempted to just use him if the cost is not exorbitant as he verbally assured me that he will give a clean report after I paid him for the fixes (and the I had absolutely no idea on all these things about zonal system etc) but because he kept not coming back on quotes and I got worried in the potential costs involved that I started reading up and that’s how I slowly discovered on how the basis of his C2 findings were based on his visual inspection(and initially I thought that was how engineers work as he kept implying by giving those C2 findings he is stricter than the other engineers like those for other flats in my development.

  • Perhaps you might like to post a link to the actual report supplied, that would be most interesting, or if you don't want to do that a copy to me at davezawadi(at)yahoo.co.uk, it would be seen by some of the right people. Looking at the pictures, it looks pretty much like a contractor job at build time, since then there have been some changes to the regulations, but it is very unlikely there is much wrong as it will be the same for all the flats.

    I am interested that the management do not want to follow this up, as I personally consider this EICR inadequate as I have said above. If the same is happening to all the owners it certainly needs attention.

    I am interested particularly in the measurements results sheet and tick list of the report. I expect that you were not present when the work was done, but I would also like to know what other inspections were carried out, particularly of the tightness of all connections, as I suspect this was way too much trouble for this Inspector.

    You have verified that the lighting is ELV, so the C2 provided was false, as the non-compliance with 701 as I noted above.

  • Oh dear. My  opinion of the guy is falling. Silent fixes, did he suggest payment in used fivers as well ?

    It should always be made very clear that unless you really know the guy well, that any remedials will not be done by the same outfit as the inspection.
    Otherwise there is a great temptation to make work by failing easy things to do, and not to bother to fail things that are really wrong and need doing, but are jobs that involve  more effort as they are awkward and less profitable to actually do.

    In other posts in this forum over the years we have read of some absolute corker examples of this sort  of thing happening.

    The agency that found him for you are missing a serious trick if they have not realised this is a temptation too far for some less scrupulous operators.

    Costs. Hard to say how much someone would quote, As well as the job itself which may vary with things we cannot see like how hard the walls are and the lengths  of slack in the cables,  it will depend on how far they have to drive and how busy as well as area factors like how easy and much it costs to park nearby - time is money and if you have to walk in for hundreds of yards and up 3 flights of stairs 3 times  lugging tool boxes only to look down out of the window and see someone scruffy type trying to break into the van it tends to put the prices up for that area next time. Some folk are wary of rented as not all tenants are actually reliably in or very welcoming even if the landlord has arranged it.

    Parts wise £ 50-100 of bits  and the bigger cost is perhaps half a day of actually being there at however many pounds an hour.  Your best bet is to try and call a few local sparks and see what they say, but good ones will probably want to see it or at least know a lot more before fixing a price - others may just over estimate and pocket the difference.

    Mike

  • How do I address this? Thanks