Big shoutout to Doncaster Cables for supporting this episode. Make sure you check them out in the links below!👇 Website: bit.ly/3IDLHLo Instagram: bit.ly/3Dz7c04 LinkedIn: bit.ly/3D8S0Wa Facebook: bit.ly/3SHZsgy TikTok: bit.ly/3FmbAki Want to know more about EV-Ultra? bit.ly/3o02JLR
Love your work lads - greetings from Ireland. Worked in industrial maintenance myself. My good hint as regards floorboards - set the circular saw depth using a piece of sample floorboard to just below the bottom of the tongue itself - not the bottom of the board. That way, there is still a margin of error of approx 4 - 5 mm and you still get to cut off the tongue without going all the way to the bottom of the board itself and possibly nicking other pipes or services. Worked for me every time. Would love to have served an apprenticeship with ye if I was starting out over again.
I must say I do agree with johns comment about commercial sparks looking down their noses at domestic sparks. I’ve worked a lot in both sectors and I must say domestic offers up a whole different set of challenges that you will never come across in commercial or industrial work. Great work guys 👌🏻👌🏻 also he said about putting the carpet grippers in window sill 👌🏻 top tips from me aswell, if it’s a furnished room take a photo before you start so everything goes back how you found it and number all your floor boards so you know where they go back to 👌🏻 great work team artisan
@@Ahmedsunz i would recommend both ! As they both will provide you with different skills and knowledge. If your going self employed don’t expect to just get a lot of commercial work it takes time to build up that client base along with a good reputation
Loved being a sparky in the 80s..sadly the army turned me into a mechanic, then hydraulic fitter.. really miss being a spark- happy days! trained to the 15th edition lol. Respect to the modern day electricians !
A very important element was covered here that is often overlooked: You _must_ have all the correct equipment and materials with you necessary to make a mug of tea. If you can't make tea on a job then, frankly, you're not really fit to be there. It's practically the law. Good job guys. 👏
Don't worry, everyone makes mistakes that result in a big bang at sometime, it's a steep learning curve and you won't do it twice. Looking on the bright side, when you accidentally connect 3 phase into a board that's linked out for single phase supply the several thousand amps fault current means the fault is cleared nice and quickly by the supply side fuses.
I once managed to short out two phases on a 35 amp supply, the bus bar of one phase poked through the insulation of another phase conductor. These days DIN rail boards have fully insulated 3-phase bus bars but that was an 80s board that I was just jiggling around. When I was done I screwed in the main fuses at the meter, measured voltage at the board, all fine. No IR testing because it was my own place and late in the evening and everything, you know how you get negligent sometimes. Turned on the RCD in the outbuilding and measured again, everything dead. The short had blown two main fuses (D02 Neozed bottle fuses) without any bang or even a fizzle. Luckily I had spare fuses so crisis averted. I'm still surprised the whole event was so quiet! Usually even an L-N short on a final circuit results in quite a bang.
Really good tip I robbed off someone the other week if you put a screw in the little hole on a wood saw you can use the magnet on the laser level and slide it up and down. It’s actually a game changer 😂
You need to buy a Faithful Nail Puller. Makes easy work of floorboard nails. I drill a 6mm hole either side of a nail so I don’t have to hammer the nail puller in too much.
@@adamsmithelec my experience on coach lights is make sure the pins are flush with the brick and not in the mortar line, that being said if your lucky enough to mounting them on a flat brick wall
450 and 1200 are for new builds to adhere to building regs that cater for disabled living. When conducting a rewire, the client can have the heights they want as long as its practical. Personally……350 to the bottom of sockets and 1300 to the bottom of switches is the sweet spot for most of my clients.
350 is too low for sockets. People shouldn't need to get on their hands and knees. 450 is the normal height for sockets. For disabled living sockets need to be much higher, I'd say 900.
In Germany we place the switches at 105-110cm and the sockets at 30cm above the floor. Interesting to see that you use 120/45cm these heights were often used in Germany untill the 1960s.
Hi, thanks for this. My house needs a full rewire which I'm happy to get done. But i need to save up for about 6 months before I do any other works inc plastering. After a house rewire, is it still liveable ? I'd get rid of all the dust and mess the electricians have made, but I'm wondering for the next 6 months, would it still be dusty? I don't mind the holes in the walls etc
It's definitely best practice, though is it mandatory? Please share the BS7671 regulation that requires fire grommets for consumer unit cable holes? Or maybe Manufacturers instructions?
We just put a quote for rewire of a 4 bedroom, 2 bathroom house and a future extension for 8K euros in Dublin! Ppl were outrageous!? Plenty of extra sckts, switches, new 2x 10mm showers, new main, iso switches, new panel, etc... All solid walls!!! Good luck if thay can find a spark to do it under our price!
People expect rewires to be priced at 30 year old prices. I've just finished a rewire and when I've brock it down I've done it for £22p hour and it was a first class job and perfectly plastered up . Never again, from now on I'm doubling that rate and if they dont like it then get someone else.
I can't believe you are still wall chasing with 2 blades and a chisel bit in an SDS. Talk about doing it the dusty, hard, slow way. It's about time Jordan bought you guys a Metabo 3 blade wall chaser and dust extraction kit (or blag one free from Metabo like Nick did).
I'll always let the customer choose the height of the new sockets and switches. Not all customers like the new heights and I'd never make that decision without consulting them
Great video guys - as always. The electrical structure of domestic houses in Britain makes me frustrated. And that you need to chase for every electrical outlet and switch - when doing a rewire - or fixing a damaged cable etc. Anyone know if they are going to make rules & regs so when installing a "hidden" cable (in wall, loft etc) you should be able to repull the wire witout opening floorboards or chasing down walls? Spark from Stockholm, Sweden
It's bizarre watching these videos as an american, our way has its own quirks but at least we can fish cables through walls.
Год назад
In Germany often times plastic pipes are put into the walls, the floor and the ceiling. There are sometimes hidden trunks called a "Kabelkamin" there you can can switch between floors. In our house there is one big trunkin the wall from the consumer unit up to the roof and the cables branch off into the walls and ceilings. So this feels like a heck lot of work.
We love Artisan but they really shouldn't do rewires. It's going to be another 4week rewire judging by John taking up those boards like he's on Time Team. (with 2 blokes watching lol) - ear defenders on whilst taking up lung destroying 60yr old underlay - missing middle wheel in Hilti which would've churned up the rubble and center piece of plaster - and finally haha, always always always get the customer to determine positions and heights, give them a sharpie and follow them round on day one obviously advising where needed. Imagine doing all that and handing the keys back for the customer to say 'why have you done those sockets / switches that height ?' Easy to pick faults in others work just hoping it helps on the next one... you guys do amazing work in other areas that is top tier - keep it up !
I only did house bashing for the extra cash, for friends or my own house, stuff shifting furniture around and lifting carpets up, I mainly did commercial/industrial installs, 20 years old making off PYRO ends on a balcony in the snow at the V+A museum, brrrrrrrrr.
@@artisanelectrics ahh that’s good news, I know I got a lot of my experience from those rewire days. I wasn’t trolling. I just thought he’d not ended up going there
The DeWalt laser owns that Hilti box right now..... Doesn't accessibility come in to play with a rewire? New builds are one thing but a rewire you aren't really matching in to existing like you would for say a few additional outlets.
I'd like to see a video on how you go about pricing a job like this, considering you have 4 lads on it including Reuben and alot of materials (all cable) supplied FOC for "sponsorship". Do you charge for the material, do you charge for the extra time to film etc?
Luke... them fire grommets. You don't cut them Criss-Cross style! You push the cable/s through to help maintain their actual use as a seal. 5 hours in your cupboard eh... and how many more on actual tartting it up. 😉
"Buy once, cry once." Now the homeowner has complete piece of mind about the entirety of the electrical system in their home. It's fully modernized now.
@@crabmansteve6844 yes but was it necessary I see this all the time rewires up sold when the system is sound and safe and all it needs is a slight up grade , the regs are used as leverage ,I agree if it’s fully necessary and it’s un safe then re wire it .
Always refer to building regs part M. Gives the acceptable mounting height of accessories between 450mm - 1200mm. I'd always go 450 bottom, 1200 top based on this.
Love your work lads always nice and neath but any chance you could give the customer a decent door light. That 1940s yolk ya have them is a joke. Even a can uo down light .
This channel just basically shows diy Dave a full on instructional video of how to re wire your house. And then they’re amazed at some of the shoddy work they come across. With in depth videos your publishing you may come a cropper for liability some day
Utter nonsense. If a qualified pilot demonstrated how to fly a plane they wouldn't be legally liable for someone unqualified having a go and crashing. Think a little next time.
@@hb4782 yeah but they also get revenue from the video which i doubt gets passed onto customers, but you cant charge for materials if they were “supplied” especially as part of an advertisement
A neat job but extremely toxic on the lungs! I don’t think a torque driver was used on the board, This is key to avoid arcing or damaging cables . Usually theres a torque label in the board.
21:22 Those leads (10mm² brown blue) are totally not up to code in our country. Can't have those leads exposed. Needs to be inside a flex or insulated (xgb we call it) when outside a junction box or lead pannel. Actually a big nono! Imagine nicking those (in our country 230V/ 40A)....
the young lad talking about installing a there phase fuse board while the link kit was still fitted and energising it is pretty fucking scary tbh. the fuck was he doing it unsupervised in the first place is the question??
Boys…how much does an average rewire cost? There’s such a variation in quotes how are you supposed to know who to go with. I have a vacant small 3 bed terraced and was just quoted £7k plus vat even though all the carpets will be up and rooms empty. Hard to stay compliant when it’s unaffordable to the average person.
Do it yourself! Buy a copy of the IEY regs, read it, study some videos then just get on with it. Run all the new cables to the consumer unit proximity but stop there, then get a pro to finish off, check and certify. All legal, all doable. Remember, you're not on the clock, so can take a much time as you choose and do at least as neat a job as a pro would. Just don't wire it all up. I'm rewiring my house and everything is legal, labelled, photographed and no expense spared, right down to cable trays in the loft. I never touch consumer units though - I only do the cabling. If I want to add a new significant load, such as an extractor fan, I consult a professional first. Happy to pay a pro money to review a PDF schematic of what I intend to do with full material spec and then pay them hourly to inspect, test and certify. They get paid for a relatively easy job. Everyone wins.
that' chase down to the 3gang switch at the front door looked awful guys.. this video shows a lack of experience from this group. re wires are never easy but you guys could deffo benefit from having a old head in the group leading the way, even noticed you hadn't bent the top and bottom lugs back on the single boxes before plastering them in. also 5 hours to mount and second fix a easy fuse board like that is crazy
You can't put sockets where you like on rewires. Yes you don't have to put them 450mm to the bottom but you can't make them less accessible than they already were.
I don’t understand why you UK sparks don’t just cut the ceiling plaster to run cables in a multi storey and just get it patched and painted afterwards at the clients expense. Surely better than all this lifting carpets and floorboards, far too much screwing around
That's actually a good thing, it means it is more likely to hit the neutral or live and trip the circuit instead of staying live when/if the cable is damaged.
@@JorgeAMG187 Well, thats the way it is. You can't even buy a B-curve breaker for the most part in Australia. It's pretty irrelevant if you fault loop is within spec for a C-curve.
Big shoutout to Doncaster Cables for supporting this episode. Make sure you check them out in the links below!👇
Website: bit.ly/3IDLHLo
Instagram: bit.ly/3Dz7c04
LinkedIn: bit.ly/3D8S0Wa
Facebook: bit.ly/3SHZsgy
TikTok: bit.ly/3FmbAki
Want to know more about EV-Ultra? bit.ly/3o02JLR
Love your work lads - greetings from Ireland. Worked in industrial maintenance myself. My good hint as regards floorboards - set the circular saw depth using a piece of sample floorboard to just below the bottom of the tongue itself - not the bottom of the board. That way, there is still a margin of error of approx 4 - 5 mm and you still get to cut off the tongue without going all the way to the bottom of the board itself and possibly nicking other pipes or services. Worked for me every time. Would love to have served an apprenticeship with ye if I was starting out over again.
I must say I do agree with johns comment about commercial sparks looking down their noses at domestic sparks. I’ve worked a lot in both sectors and I must say domestic offers up a whole different set of challenges that you will never come across in commercial or industrial work. Great work guys 👌🏻👌🏻 also he said about putting the carpet grippers in window sill 👌🏻 top tips from me aswell, if it’s a furnished room take a photo before you start so everything goes back how you found it and number all your floor boards so you know where they go back to 👌🏻 great work team artisan
Would you recommend domestic or commercial and where to strat commercial journey from if so ?
@@Ahmedsunz i would recommend both ! As they both will provide you with different skills and knowledge. If your going self employed don’t expect to just get a lot of commercial work it takes time to build up that client base along with a good reputation
Loved being a sparky in the 80s..sadly the army turned me into a mechanic, then hydraulic fitter.. really miss being a spark- happy days! trained to the 15th edition lol. Respect to the modern day electricians !
Great video as always. It would have been great to see in more detail how you deal with the existing cables and how you secure them in the chases
A very important element was covered here that is often overlooked: You _must_ have all the correct equipment and materials with you necessary to make a mug of tea. If you can't make tea on a job then, frankly, you're not really fit to be there. It's practically the law.
Good job guys. 👏
im impressed it didn't take 3 weeks again 😅
Do I know you?
How come you only use 2 blades in the hilti Chaser and not 3?
@Gabriel jackson Mrs Jessica Liam killed my dog and made a stew with him. Do not deal with her.
You need a disc on your wall chaser like Nicks, that’s a game changer.
Not 3 weeks , took them a month 😯
I always mark across the floor boards with my black sharpie saves time when your trying to find them to put back down
CU looked amazing Luke. Nice one
Don't worry, everyone makes mistakes that result in a big bang at sometime, it's a steep learning curve and you won't do it twice.
Looking on the bright side, when you accidentally connect 3 phase into a board that's linked out for single phase supply the several thousand amps fault current means the fault is cleared nice and quickly by the supply side fuses.
I once managed to short out two phases on a 35 amp supply, the bus bar of one phase poked through the insulation of another phase conductor. These days DIN rail boards have fully insulated 3-phase bus bars but that was an 80s board that I was just jiggling around. When I was done I screwed in the main fuses at the meter, measured voltage at the board, all fine. No IR testing because it was my own place and late in the evening and everything, you know how you get negligent sometimes. Turned on the RCD in the outbuilding and measured again, everything dead. The short had blown two main fuses (D02 Neozed bottle fuses) without any bang or even a fizzle. Luckily I had spare fuses so crisis averted. I'm still surprised the whole event was so quiet! Usually even an L-N short on a final circuit results in quite a bang.
Oooo, I love factory tours. When I was doing my EE back in the '90s, we had a tour of Drax and Hartlepool Nuclear. :)
Great video! Nice to see some rewire work.. didn’t know you guys like to get dirty tho 😂
You definitely need to invest in a Metabo triple blade chaser
Really good tip I robbed off someone the other week if you put a screw in the little hole on a wood saw you can use the magnet on the laser level and slide it up and down. It’s actually a game changer 😂
👏👏👏👏 genius!!
You need to buy a Faithful Nail Puller. Makes easy work of floorboard nails. I drill a 6mm hole either side of a nail so I don’t have to hammer the nail puller in too much.
Never seen one of those…. Added to my new tools list 😍
Wish my board looked as neat at that - nice job !
I would like to see more footage on how you feed/fish cable behind walls and ceilings etc please!
Noted!
Put some insulation tape on the back of those coach light pins, It'll stop them pushing back whilst you fix it.
I do this now after once losing a pin down a drain in garden I was working!
@@adamsmithelec my experience on coach lights is make sure the pins are flush with the brick and not in the mortar line, that being said if your lucky enough to mounting them on a flat brick wall
450 and 1200 are for new builds to adhere to building regs that cater for disabled living. When conducting a rewire, the client can have the heights they want as long as its practical. Personally……350 to the bottom of sockets and 1300 to the bottom of switches is the sweet spot for most of my clients.
350 is too low for sockets. People shouldn't need to get on their hands and knees. 450 is the normal height for sockets. For disabled living sockets need to be much higher, I'd say 900.
@@gadgetman36 You’re wrong
I was interested lifting the floorboards and yes the worry of hitting pipes etc, nothing changes on that score ‘
Back in the 80s we used a lump hammer and boaster chisel to lift floor boards :)
I used to also have a floorboard saw with the curved/rounded end if they needed to be cut.
L i l noo iki mloll m ll o l l l l o olkl lolo loiok. N@@lotuselise4432 of our lo lip look l lip nnnn
We always use doncaster cables, best cable by a mile nobody comes close.
It’s amazing 🤩
With us for power, it's either Doncaster or Prysmian... for Cat6 and stuff it's Doncaster
Cracking video. Very good details on each aspect mentioned.
Can use fire rated board to mount CU too, makes sense if your trying to maintain safety !
All this stone looks like a nightmare. Makes me happy that we more often than not timber frame here in the US.
Seems to be johns way or no way… patterns emerging over a few weeks
What a bitchy comment 😂Not really he seems pretty chill. Nothing wrong with taking a bit of charge. Prob what he’s instructed and paid to do.
good Video John Lee and Luke team work the Artisan way
In Germany we place the switches at 105-110cm and the sockets at 30cm above the floor. Interesting to see that you use 120/45cm these heights were often used in Germany untill the 1960s.
In belgium 110 center for a switch and 25 center for an outlet. But this is not a written rule
Can you also do a video on how you rewire wet rooms - bathrooms and kitchen? thanks
Great floorboard work
Lads I hope your treating Luke to another few burgers,
Fair play Luke that's a neat tidy board 👊nice job😃👍
5 hours though...
Hi, thanks for this. My house needs a full rewire which I'm happy to get done. But i need to save up for about 6 months before I do any other works inc plastering. After a house rewire, is it still liveable ? I'd get rid of all the dust and mess the electricians have made, but I'm wondering for the next 6 months, would it still be dusty? I don't mind the holes in the walls etc
"Opening this box is just making me want to get a pizza tonight..." 😂😂
It's definitely best practice, though is it mandatory? Please share the BS7671 regulation that requires fire grommets for consumer unit cable holes? Or maybe Manufacturers instructions?
We just put a quote for rewire of a 4 bedroom, 2 bathroom house and a future extension for 8K euros in Dublin! Ppl were outrageous!? Plenty of extra sckts, switches, new 2x 10mm showers, new main, iso switches, new panel, etc... All solid walls!!! Good luck if thay can find a spark to do it under our price!
Out of interest, roughly how many hours of work would that be?
Sounds far too cheap to me. I'd charge more than that in Donegal.
@@hks-lion about 6-8 days for two of us! Lets say around 50x2 working hours!
@@lukagrloci78 fair I think €8K is a decent price
People expect rewires to be priced at 30 year old prices. I've just finished a rewire and when I've brock it down I've done it for £22p hour and it was a first class job and perfectly plastered up . Never again, from now on I'm doubling that rate and if they dont like it then get someone else.
Edeting is NOICE 🎉
Why didn't you ask the customer what height they wanted them.
Because there exists regulation on that.
Only for new builds; pay attention.
@@davidjames2145not really 😂 there is still regulations when it comes to re wires.
Was this video made before having to install metal consumer units ?
I can't believe you are still wall chasing with 2 blades and a chisel bit in an SDS. Talk about doing it the dusty, hard, slow way. It's about time Jordan bought you guys a Metabo 3 blade wall chaser and dust extraction kit (or blag one free from Metabo like Nick did).
Just stick a 3rd grinding wheel between the spacer and the other 2,wheels then Just use a brink hammer so much quicker .
They will be for weeks !
A shower in the bedroom. I've known a hotel that had that feature, but that was ages ago.
I'll always let the customer choose the height of the new sockets and switches. Not all customers like the new heights and I'd never make that decision without consulting them
Absolutely, was going to comment the same 👍
I still think it should be installed to the new regs anyway?
Not in an existing property@@sebperrin9797
New regs have standard heights for a reason. Build to the latest spec no issues then.
These height regs are only for new builds not existing properties.
Great video guys - as always.
The electrical structure of domestic houses in Britain makes me frustrated. And that you need to chase for every electrical outlet and switch - when doing a rewire - or fixing a damaged cable etc.
Anyone know if they are going to make rules & regs so when installing a "hidden" cable (in wall, loft etc) you should be able to repull the wire witout opening floorboards or chasing down walls?
Spark from Stockholm, Sweden
It's bizarre watching these videos as an american, our way has its own quirks but at least we can fish cables through walls.
In Germany often times plastic pipes are put into the walls, the floor and the ceiling. There are sometimes hidden trunks called a "Kabelkamin" there you can can switch between floors. In our house there is one big trunkin the wall from the consumer unit up to the roof and the cables branch off into the walls and ceilings.
So this feels like a heck lot of work.
They dont bother thinking ahead for future
Talk about to many cooks this is a perfect example having only one in charge.
What protection glasses are you using guys? Looks good and has side protection as well
really nice work .....
We love Artisan but they really shouldn't do rewires. It's going to be another 4week rewire judging by John taking up those boards like he's on Time Team. (with 2 blokes watching lol) - ear defenders on whilst taking up lung destroying 60yr old underlay - missing middle wheel in Hilti which would've churned up the rubble and center piece of plaster - and finally haha, always always always get the customer to determine positions and heights, give them a sharpie and follow them round on day one obviously advising where needed. Imagine doing all that and handing the keys back for the customer to say 'why have you done those sockets / switches that height ?' Easy to pick faults in others work just hoping it helps on the next one... you guys do amazing work in other areas that is top tier - keep it up !
You guys have inches over there? I measured my outlets and they're 35cm from the ground and the light switch is 130cm
Isn’t one of the things that you shouldn’t do is put the CU under the stairs now because it is a potential fire escape?
No, that's for a plastic consumer unit. No fire risk for a metal cu.
It _was_ plastic; new ones are all plastic now (in the UK).
Flame resistant though.
I wish I can come there to learn more
I reside In Nigeria
I only did house bashing for the extra cash, for friends or my own house, stuff shifting furniture around and lifting carpets up, I mainly did commercial/industrial installs, 20 years old making off PYRO ends on a balcony in the snow at the V+A museum, brrrrrrrrr.
Sockets downstairs 450 ? upstairs not 450 ?
Switch with lots of cables here…. 5 😂😂
The apprentice missed out on a lot of education with this one. These are the perfect jobs to bring them on with
Reuben was there we just didn’t film those days 👍🏻
@@artisanelectrics ahh that’s good news, I know I got a lot of my experience from those rewire days. I wasn’t trolling. I just thought he’d not ended up going there
how much would you charge for that job ?
i didn't see that fancy marking out gadget that lee used to swear by when marking out boxes...has it been superseded by new fangled tech then?
Great video lads
The DeWalt laser owns that Hilti box right now..... Doesn't accessibility come in to play with a rewire? New builds are one thing but a rewire you aren't really matching in to existing like you would for say a few additional outlets.
Rewires are stressful enough cany imagine filming it all
stressful lol i love getting stuck into a nice rewire
Think it’s 3m from a shower cubicle and for the irrelevant 450mm new build height I was always told it was centre measure. Keep up the work guys.
Recently changed to 2.5M in the regs. 450mm is the bottom of a socket outlet
Surely after paying for a few man weeks of spark effort, the customer would replace that old underlay and carpet!!
I'd like to see a video on how you go about pricing a job like this, considering you have 4 lads on it including Reuben and alot of materials (all cable) supplied FOC for "sponsorship". Do you charge for the material, do you charge for the extra time to film etc?
What clips do you use to hold the conduit in the cases?
wonder how much you charged for this job ??
What is the cordless screwdriver your using in this video ? please
Luke... them fire grommets. You don't cut them Criss-Cross style! You push the cable/s through to help maintain their actual use as a seal.
5 hours in your cupboard eh... and how many more on actual tartting it up. 😉
Would be interested to see how much that cost and how long it’s taking, 3 of you on site in such a small house , did it really need a full re wire .
"Buy once, cry once."
Now the homeowner has complete piece of mind about the entirety of the electrical system in their home. It's fully modernized now.
@@crabmansteve6844 yes but was it necessary I see this all the time rewires up sold when the system is sound and safe and all it needs is a slight up grade , the regs are used as leverage ,I agree if it’s fully necessary and it’s un safe then re wire it .
Love the channel boys, do you ever wire for low voltage points like bt/data etc?
What’s these metal pencils with a green end I keep seeing everywhere and where do I get them from??
Tracer
May i ask how much a rewiring like this will cost?
Every found treasure under the already lifted boards?
Now try to do all this in een concrete house..Like they are in the Netherlands.
Hi A.E ...what cu are using ...
There seems to be some conflicts with guidance to heights with some giving centre's. 150, 450 and 1200.
Always refer to building regs part M. Gives the acceptable mounting height of accessories between 450mm - 1200mm. I'd always go 450 bottom, 1200 top based on this.
Love your work lads always nice and neath but any chance you could give the customer a decent door light. That 1940s yolk ya have them is a joke. Even a can uo down light .
This channel just basically shows diy Dave a full on instructional video of how to re wire your house. And then they’re amazed at some of the shoddy work they come across. With in depth videos your publishing you may come a cropper for liability some day
Utter nonsense.
If a qualified pilot demonstrated how to fly a plane they wouldn't be legally liable for someone unqualified having a go and crashing.
Think a little next time.
Im interested to know if youve done the rewire for a lower rate as doncaster cables supplied the cable?
Doubt it as it probably cost them more in filming/doing things as neatly/expensively as they were.
@@hb4782 yeah but they also get revenue from the video which i doubt gets passed onto customers, but you cant charge for materials if they were “supplied” especially as part of an advertisement
@@SuPrAmAd101 fair point
John, stop trying to hide your new gut. Embrace it brother. Lots of money went into growing it 🤣
A neat job but extremely toxic on the lungs!
I don’t think a torque driver was used on the board,
This is key to avoid arcing or damaging cables .
Usually theres a torque label in the board.
Miss Corey just want him back 😪
I’m sure you already are, but if not, go watch his new channel, it’s ace 👍
Measuring from skirts 🤨 1:55
Noticed that too mate. What’s going on there.
@@damothirlwall8699 seriously unprofessional
21:22 Those leads (10mm² brown blue) are totally not up to code in our country.
Can't have those leads exposed. Needs to be inside a flex or insulated (xgb we call it) when outside a junction box or lead pannel.
Actually a big nono! Imagine nicking those (in our country 230V/ 40A)....
the young lad talking about installing a there phase fuse board while the link kit was still fitted and energising it is pretty fucking scary tbh. the fuck was he doing it unsupervised in the first place is the question??
Todays hidden word is ‘agitate’ 😂
😅
I don’t think I could do a rewire especially when you’re doing the wiring part and you got someone recording you. I just want to get in and get gone.
Boys…how much does an average rewire cost? There’s such a variation in quotes how are you supposed to know who to go with. I have a vacant small 3 bed terraced and was just quoted £7k plus vat even though all the carpets will be up and rooms empty. Hard to stay compliant when it’s unaffordable to the average person.
Do it yourself!
Buy a copy of the IEY regs, read it, study some videos then just get on with it. Run all the new cables to the consumer unit proximity but stop there, then get a pro to finish off, check and certify. All legal, all doable.
Remember, you're not on the clock, so can take a much time as you choose and do at least as neat a job as a pro would. Just don't wire it all up.
I'm rewiring my house and everything is legal, labelled, photographed and no expense spared, right down to cable trays in the loft. I never touch consumer units though - I only do the cabling. If I want to add a new significant load, such as an extractor fan, I consult a professional first. Happy to pay a pro money to review a PDF schematic of what I intend to do with full material spec and then pay them hourly to inspect, test and certify. They get paid for a relatively easy job. Everyone wins.
IET regs btw.
Fat finger error.
John digging people out for not cutting boards on the joist! Hypocrite 👍
Hey Nick Bundy how much do you think Jordan charged for this. Lol
you guys need nick bundy lol
A shower in the bedroom. Are you rewiring a brothel?
that' chase down to the 3gang switch at the front door looked awful guys.. this video shows a lack of experience from this group. re wires are never easy but you guys could deffo benefit from having a old head in the group leading the way, even noticed you hadn't bent the top and bottom lugs back on the single boxes before plastering them in. also 5 hours to mount and second fix a easy fuse board like that is crazy
I've been doing rewires on average 5 a week for the past 20+ years. This was painful to watch
So one rewire per day?
If you were worried about hitting a water pipe could you not just use a metal detector
TH1AB
The hight of sockets is 450 mm from the floor to the centre of the socket ....
450 to bottom… always
You can't put sockets where you like on rewires. Yes you don't have to put them 450mm to the bottom but you can't make them less accessible than they already were.
Indeed. Don’t have to improve, but you can’t make it worse than before you started (relevant to Part M in this case).
I don’t understand why you UK sparks don’t just cut the ceiling plaster to run cables in a multi storey and just get it patched and painted afterwards at the clients expense. Surely better than all this lifting carpets and floorboards, far too much screwing around
My guess is there’s not enough plasterers around, would take weeks or months to get them in.
The still would have to cut the joists and if its an older house with a wood lathe ceiling then you don't won't to start cutting runs in them.
This video isn't for beginners
Dont like Doncaster cable its always twisted towards the end of the coils.
Rip off merchants 😂
Such high quality standards in the UK yet the earth "CPC" still isn't insulated for the complete legnth.
We in The Irish Republic only use all insulated conductors throughout their length too, and NO ring final circuits ☘️
@@williammartinculleton5875 Same as Australia, we also have a 2.5mm2 earth in 2.5mm2 cable, however, C curve breakers are the norm.
@@zoltrix7779 C curve seems kinda High for a normal household. B should be the standard really
That's actually a good thing, it means it is more likely to hit the neutral or live and trip the circuit instead of staying live when/if the cable is damaged.
@@JorgeAMG187 Well, thats the way it is. You can't even buy a B-curve breaker for the most part in Australia. It's pretty irrelevant if you fault loop is within spec for a C-curve.
Painful to watch ! All that dust and no masks , glad it’s your lungs !