Electrical Trunking

Author
Discussion

XCP

Original Poster:

17,316 posts

241 months

Tuesday 10th June 2014
quotequote all
Is it legal to chase surface mounted trunking into walls to make neat job? the house I am buying has quite a lot of surface mounted cables, which look rubbish.

DrDeAtH

3,622 posts

245 months

Tuesday 10th June 2014
quotequote all
If you are chasing the cables in, just remove the trunking and use capping over the top.

XCP

Original Poster:

17,316 posts

241 months

Tuesday 10th June 2014
quotequote all
We had an electrician in our house who said all new wiring had to be surface mounted. Is it legal to hide trunking if this is the case?

NH1

1,333 posts

142 months

Tuesday 10th June 2014
quotequote all
XCP said:
We had an electrician in our house who said all new wiring had to be surface mounted. Is it legal to hide trunking if this is the case?
Nothings illegal when it comes to electrics, it may be against the regulations but they are not mandatory anyway, also you may come into bother with building control but you wont get arrested for putting a plug on. You may get into trouble in court though if your negligence causes an accident or you kill someone.

If a cable is concealed in a wall then it must be in a safe zone or adequately protected, a safe zone being above or below, or side to side from a switch or socket etc. Also if the cable is buried then it must be protected by an RCD as well. (think iron pipe if protecting the cable). You can also bury the cable more than 50mm to get round these regs.

You wouldn't bury the trunking, you could plaster over the cable direct or use capping if so inclined.


R1 Indy

4,433 posts

196 months

Tuesday 10th June 2014
quotequote all
XCP said:
We had an electrician in our house who said all new wiring had to be surface mounted. Is it legal to hide trunking if this is the case?
rofl

i would say he just wanted an easy job! BTW trunking in houses is bug bear of mine, i cringe when a customer asks me to surface mount cabling in a otherwise well decorated room.

You can bury cables how ever you like as long as its RCD protected.

But please don't put them diagonally across the wall!! I'm fed up of coming across cables chased diagonally across the bloody wall!!!

XCP

Original Poster:

17,316 posts

241 months

Tuesday 10th June 2014
quotequote all
Amazing, thank you. This guy was adamant he had to use surface mounted trunking when putting in 2 new sockets!

That is good news. smile

B17NNS

18,506 posts

260 months

Tuesday 10th June 2014
quotequote all
XCP said:
We had an electrician in our house who said all new wiring had to be surface mounted.
Nonsense.

MatrixXXx

653 posts

165 months

Wednesday 11th June 2014
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B17NNS said:
XCP said:
We had an electrician in our house who said all new wiring had to be surface mounted.
Nonsense.
I agree utter bol***ks

JimbobVFR

2,776 posts

157 months

Wednesday 11th June 2014
quotequote all
XCP said:
We had an electrician in our house who said all new wiring had to be surface mounted. Is it legal to hide trunking if this is the case?
Just thinking out loud here but this could be related to a lack of an RCD in your consumer unit?

As a general point your Spark is talking utter tosh but giving him the benefit of doubt he could have said much more.

XCP

Original Poster:

17,316 posts

241 months

Wednesday 11th June 2014
quotequote all
We have one RCD that covers the whole house, but not on individual circuits. This guy fitted 2 new sockets for us and surface mounted both. He said it was to do with recent regulations. Just goes to show, you can't trust anyone.
I am greatly relieved to hear I can chase the wires in my new house, the trunking is a right eyesore.