EIC or MWC

Scenario:

Existing lighting circuits with fluorescent luminaires upgraded to LED equivalents.

Circuit breaker changing type and/or rating.

Contractor has provided an MWC covering the works.

All looks good, but because the circuit protective device is not strictly a like for like change, should they have actually provided an EIC?

Parents
  • I recently attended an educational webinar entitled “Top Tips for Completing Certificates and Reports,” which is part of The Wire series hosted by the NICEIC. The session provided a comprehensive overview of the appropriate utilization of electrical installation and minor works certificates. The content was delivered with remarkable clarity, offering valuable insights into the specific circumstances under which each type of certificate should be used. 

  • Hi AMK

    Thank you for providing the NIC EIC guide

    My interpretation of NIC EIC acceptable use of the MEIWC is
    Additional lighting point luminaire
    MAY be used

    The MEIWC may be used
    IF
    Existing circuit protection is suitable

    Which in my opinion referring to the original post it is not as they changed

    Circuit breaker changing type and/or rating.

    Thus as I stated early on in this thread I personally would say EIC was needed and should of been issued.  I wonder if the contractor in this discussion is NAPIT or NICEIC?  Maybe they are neither? 

  • What am I missing?  It is the work that is minor or not; not the certificate.

    If you think an EIC should have been used - because the work was not minor and therefore the MEIWC does not include all the necessary relevant details - then you would have used it.

Reply
  • What am I missing?  It is the work that is minor or not; not the certificate.

    If you think an EIC should have been used - because the work was not minor and therefore the MEIWC does not include all the necessary relevant details - then you would have used it.

Children
  • All looks good, but because the circuit protective device is not strictly a like for like change, should they have actually provided an EIC?
  • The most important thing is knowing that they connected it up correctly - an alternate choice of paperwork will save no-one from that sort ot error, and worrying about it is a distraction from the proper task of understanding what was actually done.

    M.

  • As long as all the relevant test results are recorded, I don't think it really matters which certificate is used or even just a piece of paper with hand-written details.

    Presumably if a MEIWC does not have all the required details needed for a given job then the job was not a minor work.

    I don't know what like-for-like (which never appears in the regulations) has to do with it.

    If connecting, for example, a new shower or cooker I would have (retired now) tested the circuit; none of which had been altered; to make sure everything was as it should be. 

    Incidentally - why was the MEIWC introduced in the first place? 

    I note the definition in BS7671 -

    Minor works. Additions and alterations to an installation that do not extend to the provision of a new circuit.

    is obviously ridiculously inadequate, i.e. wrong, as according to that the replacement of a consumer unit can have just a MEIWC.