Quizzes & Puzzles4 mins ago
Plasterer / Sparky question
19 Answers
When plasterboard is attached to blockwork do you use shallow pattresses for electrical points or do you drill out the blockwork to sink standard sized ones?
How far does the finished plasterboard stand out from the wall once it has been attached?
How far does the finished plasterboard stand out from the wall once it has been attached?
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No best answer has yet been selected by dicky113. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Thanks for all the answers so far. Tezestwing you say that the 12.5mm board will be about 15mm proud of the wall. Does this mean all the electrical wiring needs to be chased in to the blockwork? I assumed that it would be just hidden in the gap between the blockwork and the board. I guess it would need to have metal conduit of some sort then to prevent people banging picture hooks into it?
it is far easier to first fix the ceiling leave enough cable x2 for ring main for drop to socket outlet + trimming, then fix plasterboard all out, then chase vertical cable runs with sharp blade + straight edge through to block work down to socket location blade round socket, bolster out block fit and fix box flush to choice then just lay cable flat side by side into the chase then cover cable with plastic http://www.screwfix.com/prods/31046/Electrical /Conduit/PVC-Channel/PVC-Channel-1-Pack-of-25; jsessionid=Q0TQYT1DFPJSWCSTHZOCFEY then plaster out and skim hth Tez
Never heard of the safe zones then? DON'T be stringing cable willy-nilly behind plasterboard, please, do some research and find out what is permissible under the 17th Edition IEE wiring regulations and Part P of the Building regulations. Or stop being a tight wad and call in a professional sparks (like me) who knows what he is doing. With all due respect , it sounds very much lke you don't.
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LCDMAN
You say "call in a professional sparks (like me) who knows what he is doing. With all due respect , it sounds very much lke you don't. "
No, you are right I dont know. I thought that was what this site was all about. you don't know something, but want to, you ask a question and people reply.
By the way, who said I was going to do the work?
You say "call in a professional sparks (like me) who knows what he is doing. With all due respect , it sounds very much lke you don't. "
No, you are right I dont know. I thought that was what this site was all about. you don't know something, but want to, you ask a question and people reply.
By the way, who said I was going to do the work?
Have a read here;
http://www.ultimatehandyman.co.uk/forum1/diy-e lectrical-work-and-the-law-t6296.html
It outlines what you can/can't do for yourself under the 17th Edition IEE wiring regs and Part P of the Building Regulations., especially concerning the new "Special Locations" (kitchens, bathrooms, outside etc.)
Sounds like you are doing amendments / modifications / provision of new circuits, so it will be notifiable work and must be carried out to 17th Edition. Who's going to be testing and certifying this work? Who is the "competent person" supervising this work? Have you notified your LABC?
http://www.ultimatehandyman.co.uk/forum1/diy-e lectrical-work-and-the-law-t6296.html
It outlines what you can/can't do for yourself under the 17th Edition IEE wiring regs and Part P of the Building Regulations., especially concerning the new "Special Locations" (kitchens, bathrooms, outside etc.)
Sounds like you are doing amendments / modifications / provision of new circuits, so it will be notifiable work and must be carried out to 17th Edition. Who's going to be testing and certifying this work? Who is the "competent person" supervising this work? Have you notified your LABC?
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Knobby, need to have proper Insulation resistance test of that lighting circuit, to check for potential live/neutral/ or live/earth fault. Incandescent lamps are like the old wired fuses, they are a lot less "intrusive" in circuits and more "forgiving". Changing to an energy saver (basically a cold cathode fluorescent) will show up any long-standing faults.
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Just because you didn't like my replies doesn't make them less valid! Part P and the 17th Edition IEE regs are there to stop those with no knowledge doing something stupid ("I assumed that it would be just hidden in the gap between the blockwork and the board.") and making things dangerous for themselves or others. It was obvious from your initial question that you have little or no knowledge in this area, and your subsequent answers suggested that you were potentially planning to do this work yourself.
The rules are there for everyone's safety and benefit - my advice still stands, either research them and follow them or get someone in who does and can.
The rules are there for everyone's safety and benefit - my advice still stands, either research them and follow them or get someone in who does and can.
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