Detached garage wiring

I have a large detached garage which is supplied from the  house via a "garage" ditribution box, underground armoured cable then into a "garage" box containing main rccd / 6a lighting breaker and 26A breaker all installed by an approved / certified electrician.

Can I, as a non professional electrician, considering the new regulations, wire the garage for 3  lighting units , and 4 x 13a doulble  power power sockets, and connect them into the supplied distrbution box without having the instalation certified?

Many  thanks for your replies and guidance on this post.

Parents
  • Are you in England or Wales? (they have different rules.)

    If England and you are extending or altering existing circuits, there is no need to notify. In Wales you probably do, unless the wiring is all indoors.

    If you are creating brand new circuits, then in any case they are notifiable. 

    If you are competent to do so, you can create your own certificates, but it will be in the gift of your local authority building inspectors to decide if they will accept that. The only folk who can inspect and certify your work, officially at least, are the local authority, or an electrician who is part of a 3rd party verification scheme such as NAPIT.

    NICIEC do not do 3rd party verifications (though some members may 'adopt' the work of others it is not the approved route.).

    But what you propose raises more questions than mere paper trail. Is the existing supply up to it, and why do you need 3 lights circuits at all, and what is currently  connected ?

    Mike.

Reply
  • Are you in England or Wales? (they have different rules.)

    If England and you are extending or altering existing circuits, there is no need to notify. In Wales you probably do, unless the wiring is all indoors.

    If you are creating brand new circuits, then in any case they are notifiable. 

    If you are competent to do so, you can create your own certificates, but it will be in the gift of your local authority building inspectors to decide if they will accept that. The only folk who can inspect and certify your work, officially at least, are the local authority, or an electrician who is part of a 3rd party verification scheme such as NAPIT.

    NICIEC do not do 3rd party verifications (though some members may 'adopt' the work of others it is not the approved route.).

    But what you propose raises more questions than mere paper trail. Is the existing supply up to it, and why do you need 3 lights circuits at all, and what is currently  connected ?

    Mike.

Children
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