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Question
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Answer
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When did the 17th Edition Wiring Regulations
come into force?
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They were released in January 2008 and came into force
on the 31st July 2008
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What happened to the 16th Edition Wiring Regulations?
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They have now been superseded
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Does my domestic electrical contractor have to be
qualified in the 17th Edition Wiring Regulations?
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All electrical work carried out in your property by an
electrical contractor must be done by a competent contractor qualified to
BS 7671 – 2008 17th Edition Wiring Regulations
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My neighbour who did his own work, recons he can do it
better and cheaper is that allowed?
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No. All electrical work contracted out must be done by a
qualified competent contractor
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What would happen if I used a non qualified contractor?
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Beside the safety issue of letting a person mess with
your electrics, a lot of insurance company’s could invalidate your
insurance policy if you had the misfortune to make a claim after an
electrical fault caused a major problem
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How do I know if the contractor is qualified?
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He must be affiliated with a professional body like the
NIC EIC, NAPIT and some others as well, (it is just like
the CORGI scheme with gas installations) the contractor should be able to
be found on their web site or they will confirm that the contractor is
registered with them
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My contractor tells me the sockets in my house must be
protected by a R.C.D. (see glossary) is this correct?
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Yes. There are some exceptions, but for the majority of
installations all circuits are required to have the additional protection
of a 30mAmp R.C.D.
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Is one R.C.D. ample to protect my whole house?
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The requirement is not to have all circuits
protected by a single R.C.D. as the hazards that can be caused when the
R.C.D. trips could put the occupants at risk, a new 17th edition
system will have a minimum of 2 R.C.D’s within the consumer unit thus
allowing at least 50% of the electrical circuits to remain on if one of the
circuits causes one R.C.D’s to trip, this can sometimes be impracticable
on a small installation with only 1 lighting circuit and 1 ring (socket)
circuit or were limited space for the consumer unit
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How would the electrical circuits be divided on a 17th
edition installation?
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The most common approach would be to divide the property
into two but allocating the opposites to each R.C.D. example would be to
put upstairs lights and downstairs sockets on R.C.D.1 and downstairs lights
with upstairs sockets onto R.C.D.2 then hopefully your reducing the risk of
loosing lighting throughout the house
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I have heard that with the 17th edition I do
not need supplementary bonding (see glossary) in my bathroom or shower room
now, is this correct?
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The 17th edition requires that two of the
following need to be in place to comply with the 17th edition.
A. R.C.D. protection of all circuits within the bathroom
or shower room.
B. Main Equipotential Bonding of incoming services in
place.
C. Supplementary bonding of metallic surfaces within the
bathroom or shower room.
As a precaution I would advise, if the situation arose
and the opportunity to install supplementary bonding was available, install
it.
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Should I receive any paperwork on completion of any
electrical work at my property?
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Yes. All electrical work must be tested and the relevant
certification supplied, and these should be kept with important documents
as proof that the work was carried out correctly and by a qualified
contractor
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Do I have to inform the local building authorities of
electrical work carried out by a contractor at my property?
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No. it is the responsibility of the contractor to inform
the local building authorities of the type of work and nature of the
property
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Will my electrical installation that was done correctly
to the requirements of the 16th edition wiring regulations, have
to be redone now to comply to the 17th edition wiring
regulations.
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That a good question, the property will not now comply
to the latest regulations and it is advisable to always be compliant to the
latest, the installation will not be anymore unsafe that it was when
completed under the 16th edition, but should be brought up to
current requirements. Talk to your electrical contractor about this as
there can often be a simple solution and small alteration to allow the
installation to become compliant.
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