Discuss Gas training sticky in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

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I'm doing the bpec gas foundation so I'm also doing a port folio. Just throw it all in mate no matter how trivial. Te more evidence the better.

Ha ha its hard to know what to do ! He showed me and example and i was like yer easy as so i wrote one with detail he emailed me back saying more detail ! But my point is if i do a install obviously carry out tightness test but its part of install on the tightness test ones can i just cross reference ? Because what are the chances of goin to a job and just doing a let by and tightness ? Unless its a leak ?
 
ill ask in here a im doing it tonight and wont get an email reply till tommorrow. we do servicing etc at a commercial premises and theres a u6 meter for the club house with no bonding etc. could i use this as an example for NCS if it just doesnt have bonding ? or does it need to be a little bit more substantial ?

I would say no as it's a separate issue, there's a different reporting form for bonding. Look for things like no on/off tape, meter labelling for NCS on a meter, you'll find loads. Most common NCS you'll find on meters is probably no emergency phone number on the meter. In the real world you just write it on or stick a new label on but in portfolio land you write it up.
 
am i right in saying you cant gas rate a fire with no instuctions etc cant find data plate either.
 
You can gas rate anything, what you can't do is compare it with the manufacturers data for the appliance if there is no data plate, instructions and you don't recognise the appliance. It all come down to a bit of common sense in the end. As long as you've got a good flame picture, flue flow and no spillage I can't see a huge problem with gas rating to get an input to check the ventilation requirement. What you can end up doing is At Risking a fire due to no ventilation when it doesn't actually need any according to the missing instructions. It's surprising how many people manage to find the instructions when you tell them you are going to turn their fire off through lack of ventilation.

To me the important thing is that I can walk away knowing that I've left the appliance in a safe condition, whether that be working or turned off.

What you also need to bear in mind is that I've been doing this stuff for over 30 years so will recognise a lot of the older stuff that new entrants to the industry have never seen before. When I do my re assessments there are guys in the room that have never worked on an open flued appliance in the field.
 
What you also need to bear in mind is that I've been doing this stuff for over 30 years so will recognise a lot of the older stuff that new entrants to the industry have never seen before. When I do my re assessments there are guys in the room that have never worked on an open flued appliance in the field.

Thanks mate. I agree with you totally here ! To be honest ive only dealt with a few opeen flued appliances in my time ! And fires is the first time for my portfolio !
 
[DLMURL]http://www.radmidlands.co.uk/ControlsDom.pdf[/DLMURL]
 
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I would tread VERY carefully doing a spillage test on a fire with no MI
I know examples of fires which say spillage must be down "at either end of canopy" or " 50mm in from RH side of canopy" or "by running smoke match along the length of the canopy"
So from the descriptions given where MUST you do the spillage test on the fire you are working on if you have no MI?
You can vet your boots when there's a CO incident the guy with the clipboard doing the investigation will have them
 
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