So that gets me asking is PAT testing simply another health and safety tax (as I suspect), simply a way for a business to stop them getting sued should the worst happen (as I suspect) or genuinely a way to protect the end user from the seemingly never ending stream of suicidal electrical devices that every day are threating to self destruct up and down the country?
My friend above who suspects correctly in his assumption of PAT Testing but it's not the only reason for PAT Testing.
To mention his 3rd part first - electrical equipment is mass produced; more than ever, and it is put into the consumers hands from production with a manufacturers guideline of how best to use it and then it is not used proparly it can become damaged, this leads to fire risk, electrocution risk, static shock risk and other things.
(Before you pull me up on static shock risk this is because some people don't understand the difference between that and electric shock and have been known to sue for static shock).
PAT Testing does protect the business in the event of legal action, it does help them in the event of an insurance claim, whether for or against but it is not a health and safety tax... PAT Testing despite what many think has been around since the 1960's; this is taken from a
website : Portable appliance testing and inspection was conducted on a 3 month (high risk) and 6 month (low risk) cycle from the early 1960s onwards in government departments under the control of the Department of the Environment Property and Services Agency (circa 1970 to 2000) as the DOEPSA was known and prior to that as the Ministry of Public Buildings and Works (MoPBW) until about 1970.
Extensive record keeping was made into log-books and generally the equipment used was an insulation resistance tester, simple hand tools and visual inspection. This testing and inspection was done under a planned maintenance scheme and predated both the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 and the Electricity at Work Act 1990 that are frequently quoted as the reason that PAT inspection is done.
So you see - PAT Testing was being done long before Health & Safety at work began, and a very long time before the present blame culture we're living in.
The biggest problem is that the minority of PAT Testers give the majority of PAT Testers a bad name, with their cold calling and blatant misleadings of the truth - things like - you must get a pat test or have legal action against you or ringing up and saying what's the date on the green sticker? or you must get pat tested every year - all are wrong in their own way
Cold callers are usually sales people working on a script taken from information given to them by the company paying the bill so they don't know what they're saying is wrong; so we shouldn't pick on them. At the end of the day they are simply someone trying to earn a crust.
Most pat testing companies are very honest good quality people - I should know, I know a lot of them so I'm in a good position to judge.
PAT Testing is there for the protection of the business owner, the employee AND the consumer in the same ways and in different ways.
Hope that clears things up a bit, have a good day everyone