ducabi wrote: ↑Tue Sep 27, 2022 12:09 am
sharpener wrote: ↑Mon Sep 26, 2022 11:54 pm
Alternatively you could DIY the whole issue and get the LA Building Control to inspect it when it is done for peace of mind, I have done that successively for a whole-house rewire, an extension and a new garage. At least then you have their certificate when it comes to sell the house, and a good story to tell your insurers.
The DNO may well accept you declaring yourself as all three, site owner, Generator and Installer, I haven't had any comeback after doing just this. Probably better than leaving the boxes blank or n/a.
Is it legal to do things like house rewire or inverter installation without being qualified electrician?
Yes, as there is no legal definition as to what a "qualified" person is. All the law refers to is competence, as in a "competent person". I've had to jump through hoops because of this, because I trained as an electrician as a part time job, back in the 1970's. I sat the City and Guilds exams and worked with an elderly electrician who taught me a great deal, but I was never an apprentice. Back then this didn't matter, as long as you had your C&G chits and had your experience and on the job training signed off by a competent person you were deemed qualified.
Move forward a few decades, to the time I wanted to build us a house, and I dusted off my old C&G chits, and then enrolled in a short (4 week) course at the local college that was designed as a "return to work" training course for those that had been out of the trade for some time. As I had just retired from work I got the course at a hefty discount, most expensive bit was buying the books. The wiring regulations alone cost around £80 IIRC, outrageous really, given that everyone needs a copy.
Problem I then ran into was that none of our local building control bodies had anyone qualified to sign off work done by others. At the time the companies that provide accreditation for part P work (NICEIC, NAPIT, STROMA, etc) were NOT accrediting inspect and test (i.e essentially C&G 2391) for new installations undertaken by non-members. All a bit of a closed shop. The local building control bodies were not able to just add the inspection and test to all the other building control inspection and approval work they were doing, and apologised profusely but explained they were in a Catch 22 situation with the accreditation companies that didn't want anyone else signing off work against Part P.
The fix for me was surprisingly easy. I still had my ID card, dating back from 1979 when I was working part time as an electrician, and one of the part P accreditation companies was offering a scheme for "retired electricians", whereby they could join, for a reduced subscription, as long as they only did a handful of Part P jobs a year (off the top of my head I think it was around 5 or 6 a year). I used that scheme initially, and signed off the first tranche of work myself, and lodged the IEC using my own accreditation number, then that scheme was withdrawn, so I wasn't able to do any more Part P work.
I believe that since then the building control bodies have managed to twist the collective arms of all the Part P accreditation companies, so that they will now accredit third party inspection and test. Not cheap, though, I think the fee is fixed and somewhere around £450, which is a hell of a lot for a pretty simple job, where the inspect and test part may only take half an hour or so.
25 off 250W Perlight solar panels, installed 2014, with a 6kW PowerOne inverter, about 6,000kWh/year generated
6 off Pylontech US3000C batteries, with a Sofar ME3000SP inverter