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- 17 Oct 2018
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I've just completed a full renovation on an empty flat. The last job to do was connect the gas hob. It was the last job because it's taken months to find a gas engineer to quote for the job (others stopped responding when I asked about providing an invoice, or confirming their Gas Safety number). So I hired the only firm that quoted and then had to wait 3 weeks for availability. Unfortunately they discovered that the gas hob itself was leaking inside. I asked them to disconnect and cap the supply.
I also asked if they could take the hob away to investigate if it could be repaired. They said they don't usually do that type of work, which is fair enough.
They said it could be a loose compression fitting, but if it's a faulty valve - a replacement could be difficult to obtain. They advised the best thing would be to chuck the hob and fit a new one, and I would totally agree - normally!
The complication is that I've just sold the property and have an agreed completion date within the next 2 weeks. It's a nice looking 5-burner hob, and a close-up shot formed one of the main photos of the property on Rightmove. So I would like to avoid making such a significant change, if at all possible, which may prompt an already shaky buyer and pedantic conveyancer to pull out of the sale completely. It's a discontinued Baumatic hob, and new replacements are no longer available.
So what I'd like to do is take the hob home, open it up, check for loose compression fittings, and somehow test it for air tightness (maybe with a foot pump and leak detection fluid?) before hiring the same firm to connect and retest again.
I've read the rules on this and as far as I can see I would need to be a competent person before I can open up the hob on a workbench. Could anyone kindly confirm the minimum certification required for obtaining 'competent person' status sufficient for opening the hob on a workbench?
I also asked if they could take the hob away to investigate if it could be repaired. They said they don't usually do that type of work, which is fair enough.
They said it could be a loose compression fitting, but if it's a faulty valve - a replacement could be difficult to obtain. They advised the best thing would be to chuck the hob and fit a new one, and I would totally agree - normally!
The complication is that I've just sold the property and have an agreed completion date within the next 2 weeks. It's a nice looking 5-burner hob, and a close-up shot formed one of the main photos of the property on Rightmove. So I would like to avoid making such a significant change, if at all possible, which may prompt an already shaky buyer and pedantic conveyancer to pull out of the sale completely. It's a discontinued Baumatic hob, and new replacements are no longer available.
So what I'd like to do is take the hob home, open it up, check for loose compression fittings, and somehow test it for air tightness (maybe with a foot pump and leak detection fluid?) before hiring the same firm to connect and retest again.
I've read the rules on this and as far as I can see I would need to be a competent person before I can open up the hob on a workbench. Could anyone kindly confirm the minimum certification required for obtaining 'competent person' status sufficient for opening the hob on a workbench?