Well the installation is certainly s***.
Yes, that's it - the thing that's not fully seating in it's holder - push it in more at the bottom.So the the case with 60amp written on it is the cutout!
This cutout definitely had seals intact before the works so presumably it was used to isolate, but the digimeter still has a readout in the same ballpark as before the works. The digimeter has the facility to recall it's recent setting?Yes, that's it - the thing that's not fully seating in it's holder - push it in more at the bottom.
I hope you have not paid in full for this bloody mess!
Black and Red are original fuse box tails (early eighties). Although they were supposed to be coming out I think the spark had spotted the seal on the meter and knew all along that he'd be leaving the old tails in place once the householder had vacated the premises...They will need access for maintenance/testing for sure. They appear to be floating in the air at present? Red Black single insulation?
Is this the only place they could have gone? Is it close to where the DNO cut out is? How far? Where's the Meter with regards to this?
'Contractors' I suppose the clue was in the title - no contract, so no actual remit, so no comeback apart from a real stinker of a feedback.
What do suppliers do to sparks that remove meter seals?
It wasn't pushed home properly. It is now.It also looks to me like the cutout fuse isn't correctly seated, which would worry me slightly.
How do I identify his scheme if the cert wasn't issued and I don't have his scheme membership number?Of course there is a contract. It doesn't need to be written. And an implied term of that contract is that the work will be done with a reasonable level of care and skill and, at a minimum, in compliance with the law. The law (Part P of the Building Regulations) requires electrical work to be done in accordance with BS 7671 or an equivalent level of safety.
You give him fair opportunity to come back and remedy all the defects at his cost and provide you with the appropriate certificates (which are required by BS 7671) and if he fails to do so you tell him you will get another (an) electrician to redo the work and will sue him for the full cost and your consequential losses for his breach of contract.
You can also report him to his self-certification scheme or to Trading Standards.
How do I identify his scheme if the cert wasn't issued and I don't have his scheme membership number?
Hang on - to what were the new tails from the new meter connected when the new meter was installed?Black and Red are original fuse box tails (early eighties).
He is not a spark.Although they were supposed to be coming out I think the spark had spotted the seal on the meter and knew all along that he'd be leaving the old tails in place once the householder had vacated the premises...