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You do know that you don't need to have anything tested. It's up to you as the owner as to the level of testing carried out
http://www.hse.gov.uk/electricity/faq-portable-appliance-testing.htm
It says:
Is PAT compulsory?
No. The law simply requires an employer to ensure that their electrical equipment is maintained in order to prevent danger. It does not say how this should be done or how often.
I agree but the pont I was making is that many devices don't ever need testing.Be careful with this.
Just to elaborate, the pat tester works for an organisation that has a few shops selling second hand goods so they pat test them before selling them on.
Now presuming they got their employers permission, can the pat tester carry out testing on items that belongs to their own equipment in another small business that the employee owns, and most importantly would it affect anyone's insurance should anything later go up in smoke that had been pat tested by them? Meaning, could the insurers say, no sorry, you're not covered because you were the pat tester of your own equipment?
This is exactly the opposite of how it is. If you open up one of the cables you probably have with screw terminals inside - 13A plugs, 4 way cables - that kind of stuff, I'd almost guarantee you find some where the terminals are loose, and probably even the odd one where the earth wire is out - because somebody tripped over the cable and never said anything. Computer power supplies often part-fail making them fail a test, even though they carry on working, and it's not unknown for kettle bases to be full of water!If you are in an office with properly installed IT equipment then PAT is just not needed.
The problem is the a PAT like the MOT in that it only tells you it passed on the day of the test.
You couild get your man to do the test and the next day some numpty crushes the cable or mashes the plug. If there was a fire or something then the assessor would what before use inspections were carried out. The PAT would be irrelevant.
Except the law doesn't require PAT. It never has. You cannot be prosecuted for not doing the test. What you can be prosecuted for is not ensuring the kit is safe to use - this is whay many second hand/recycling shops wont accept electrical goods.But if you have done what the law and hse etc guided, and say you pat tested annually for averagely used items, then you won't, at least, get done for not pat testing....which is as much as the law requires.
You do know that you don't need to have anything tested. It's up to you as the owner as to the level of testing carried out
http://www.hse.gov.uk/electricity/faq-portable-appliance-testing.htm
It says:
Is PAT compulsory?
No. The law simply requires an employer to ensure that their electrical equipment is maintained in order to prevent danger. It does not say how this should be done or how often.
Can a PAT tester carry out pat testing on their own business equipment?
I can't find that requirement - do you have a reference?Please be careful with what your saying here as your making a big bold statement that isn't actually correct. What the HSE actually say is that class 1 electrical appliances must undergo a portable appliance test as part of a maintenance programme and class 2 appliances must at least have a visual inspection.
Exactly.Insurers never ask about PAT testing, neither is it a policy condition.
It's all a big con by the PAT industry.
HSE were telling people they didn't need everything testing back in 2007.Has been for as long as I can remember.
Though I'll bet they are peed off that it's nowhere near as good a scam as Part P.