I thought PAT testing was on for portable equipment? Isn’t that what the 'P' stands for in PAT? Is a cooker portable?
Portable appliance testing and to be portable either under 14 kg or on wheels, so the batching plants I worked on were portable, it may have required 14 tractor units to move them, but still portable. So, although often called PAT testing, the correct name is the inspection and testing of in-service electrical equipment.
All electrical stuff needs testing, but some items need a specialist to test them, be it simply as being locked, as with a vending machine, or because it involves some non-electrical danger as with a boiler. So the PAT testing is split into two, the management and the actual testing, and the exam also split. So the person keeping the records may not be the same person as the one testing.
But the installation only involves the wires, and distribution system, traditionally this includes lights, even if a bulb is technically current using equipment. And the standard form to record PAT testing is very different to the forms used to record the state of the installation, so the two are separate. At least that was the case, until the English landlord law on EICR came in.
Since the stuff with a plug can be tested with an automated machine, so can be done by the semi-skilled (instructed person) it is common for firms to have all stuff with plugs on, tested by someone different to stuff hard-wired, but the forms used for current using equipment are not the same as the form for the installation, so although the inspector may test both equipment and the installation at the same time, he will use two different forms.
This has caused a problem with the landlord law, as it requires all non-portable equipment to be tested with the EICR, but the PAT testing forms do not use codes C1, C2, C3, FI etc. And in any case, often an electrician is not authorised to remove boiler covers. There is also a problem with missing equipment, if there is no smoke alarm, there is nothing to allow that to be reported, that's down to someone trained in fire prevention not the electrician. However, where I worked the electricians would go around with the smoke generator and test the smoke alarms, but again the record was independent to the EICR.
However, there is nothing to say an electrician must do the PAT testing while doing an EICR, that is down to the building manager, he has the equipment register, and he has to ensure all equipment is on the register, and he has a certificate of newness or an inspection report for all items on the register.
Odd, but one can write out a PAT test for all in a building, the items do not need to have labels on them, normally we will use a label, mainly as then it is the user's responsibly to ensure anything he uses has been tested. What one needs to remember is the testing is not restricted to just homes, or just businesses, so the rules need to cover all. Some Universities insist all electrical equipment used in their halls of residence is tested. And where I have worked when accommodation was provided as part of the job, often certain equipment is banned, like in the cup boilers.
So as an electrical engineer, I had to decide who does what. First PAT test I had done by an electrician, once he had done the first test, and recorded what needed testing, then they were in the main retested by semi-skilled. However, the death of Emma Shaw caused a rethink on that policy, the court case that followed made it clear that we can't use semi-skilled even when all he has to do, is plug in a tester, press a button, and write down what the tester says. So for the last 20 years, we have had to use skilled people to inspect and test.