What Kit do I Need to Lock Off an MCB?
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- Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
- We demonstrate the kit required to safely secure the isolation of an MCB, RCBO and AFDD.
Videos are training aids for City and Guilds (C and G) and EAL courses Level 1, 2, 3 plus AM2, AM2S and AM2E.
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Good stuff Joe. Locking off and proving dead or not live should be drummed in until it is second nature like doing up your showlaces. It should also be one of the first tools an Apprentice gets in their toolbox.
🦾
landlords getting some tips with this one
There is all types that will fit now 👌👍
Ye kya hai sir Ji 😊😊😊
That lock ain't stopping no one 💀
That's not the point. Learn what LOTO is
The way to get rid of a MasterLock is to hit it with another MasterLock..
The point is to stop negligence, not maliciousness.
Do you have a legal reason to remove the lock? Is your reason better than
Health and Safety at Work etc Act
Or
The Electricity at Work Regulations 1989 reg 29 is important
Or
Electricity Safety, Quality and Continuity Regulations (ESQCR) have a read of
Domestic fatalities attributed to electrical equipment eg a fatality due to a person rewiring their house or with an appliance that has not been isolated from the supply must be reported to BIS. Other examples include electrocution including intentional acts, or form fires and explosions arising from or alleged to have arisen from a fault on the customer's equipment or wiring.
Dutyholders are only expected to report such incidents where they have knowledge of the occurrence of the event or the facts of the event.
Another section to reference
Events that lead to the death or injury to an employee of a dutyholder covered by these Regulations should be reported to HSE under RIDDOR only.
Deaths and injuries to members of the public that are attributable in whole or in part to the generating, transforming, control or carrying of energy up to and including the supply terminals are reportable by dutyholders to HSE.
Examples of events that must be reported under this regulation include those resulting in the death of or injury to someone who is not an employee of the generator, distributor or meter operator and are:
caused directly or indirectly by contact, whether accidental or deliberate, with live electrical conductors eg a member of the public receives electric shock or fatal injuries when a raised part of the plant they are operating makes contact with an overhead line
caused directly or indirectly by or resulting from the release, discharge or escape of flame, arc, arc products, gas or energy from electrical conductors or plant, eg a member of the public receives burns after energy is released above ground following the failure of an underground link box or pit
caused by impact or contact with a support (eg a tower or pole) or a building or structure, eg a road traffic accident in which the occupants of the vehicle suffer fatal injuries when their vehicle collides with a pole
caused by falling, deliberately or accidentally, from a support, building or structure, or, into an excavation
caused by the failure or collapse of any non-electrical part of the dutyholders operational electricity supply system or works - eg the collapse of a substation wall, cable trench or substation fencing, tower or wind turbine
that occur on domestic, commercial or industrial installations as a direct result of an event of a dutyholder. Events such as these shall be reported by the dutyholder responsible for equipment directly involved in the event. eg A member of the public receives an electric shock from a domestic wiring installation which has become live as a direct result of the loss of a neutral connection on a distributor's system, or a member of the public dies as a result of a fire originated by the distributor's service cut-out.