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Gas Rating dfe with no data plate?

Discuss Gas Rating dfe with no data plate? in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

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Hobo128

Gas Engineer
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Went to a dfe service the other day and found that there was no MI or data badge on the fire. So i had to assess the installation against the requirment of the current and reletive british standard regs.

Measured hearth requirments: Ok
Measure flue diameter/height against builders opening:Ok
Checked for adequit ventilation ( Document j part 3.11 100cm2): Ok
Visually inspected flue :Ok
Flue flow test:Ok
Took note of position of coals and cleaned them and burner then replaced:Ok
Checked FSD (29 second fail safe):Ok
Checked working pressure at meter 22.5
Checked working pressure at appliance 21.5:Ok
Spillage test as stated using method from Essential gas safety:Ok
Then finally i gas rated it (3600x10.76x21/120=6.77kwgross)

My question is that is there any point me gas rating this appliance without having a data badge or Mi or should i have just capped the appliance straight away even though everything seems in good working order?
 
Its a bit crazy.
Probably a good serviceable appliance that cant be serviced because of a lack of MI.
So because of that it stays in situ unserviced and continues to be used ?
 
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i dont see the problem. the appliance has been designed, tested and certified to work a specific way. Its been decided by the designer that it needs to be spillage tested at a certain point for a certain reason to comfirm its working. After all that effort why should you not want to check its working as designed? because you dont want to bother searching for the instructions is not a "professional" reason to not do your job correctly. If you cant get the instructions you cant do your job correctly. Your job tho is to ensure its working as designed.
 
I think the issue is they arent sure how to test it as no MI to refer too or rating plate.

with no MI can the BS can be referred to re ventilation and the kw calculated from gas rate with usual poc test as simple dfe fire ???
 
yes you can measure the gas rate, but how do you know its correct without manufacturers data? is the injector worn, or incorrectly sized? without manufacturers data you cant even confirm its designed for use with natural gas really.
 
Indeed.
Just seems mad that although it cant be serviced it can continue to be used whatever hidden danger it may present ?
 
British Gas used to have a system classifying appliances as 'Category X, Y or Z' I can't remember it properly as it was rarely used and I left ten years ago and it may not apply now but it was for appliances that were not GC listed/so old there was no data/weird imports/pre gas conversion/lost data badge etc etc. Depending on the appliances lack of data it would fall into X,Y or Z category and there was a written down method for servicing it on a best endeavours basis.

Someone might remember it or is there any BG lads on here?

Saying that, these days if I could not cover my arris by having all the correct data I would cap it off. None of us get paid enough for a service to be taking chances with grey areas that could back fire on you if the worst happened and you were stood in court.
 
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Hmm my view...

without the databadges + heat input.

how can you 100% say the meter is big enough!
 
If i go to do a cp12 and find an inset fire i alway's get the instruction's either from the owner or the net otherwise ar. I at least take it out to check the flue is clear and give it the one over,i find people never tend to service them. I went to do a cp12 last month and tennant informed me that the fire had not been out in 11yr (old victorian house) omg is it just me going overboard do you guys remove them on a cp12?.
 
Ive allways avoided fires when I can but for a CP12 you are required to do exactly the same checks and tests as when installing. For example you may perform a spillage test which passes fine but without removing the fire how can you tell the flue is clear? If there is no liner how can you tell that no mortar is missing from the brickwork? or that any gas pipe inside the builders entrance is taped up?

In reality as soon as you do any work on a gas appliance you are then from that point responsible for it, so a lack of identification should mean you disconnect it and make it safe until it can be identified and tests performed on it to the MI.
 
Ive allways avoided fires when I can but for a CP12 you are required to do exactly the same checks and tests as when installing. For example you may perform a spillage test which passes fine but without removing the fire how can you tell the flue is clear? If there is no liner how can you tell that no mortar is missing from the brickwork? or that any gas pipe inside the builders entrance is taped up?

In reality as soon as you do any work on a gas appliance you are then from that point responsible for it, so a lack of identification should mean you disconnect it and make it safe until it can be identified and tests performed on it to the MI.



agree ,gas regs 26.9


(9) Where a person performs work on a gas appliance he shall immediately thereafter examine—

(a)the effectiveness of any flue;

(b)the supply of combustion air;

(c)its operating pressure or heat input or, where necessary, both;

(d)its operation so as to ensure its safe functioning,


so without the instructions and data badge information you can not do this.

same can be said for visual risk assessment, which requires you to check adequate ventilation? writing visual checks only for an appliance you have not been asked to service is fine, but you need to do alittle more than just look.
 
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At the end of the day there's a limit to what you can do, no one can say that something is 100% safe, without checking every part of the system, all you can do is your best. Ppl working for councils have 10-12 services a day to get through, they can be houses with three/four appliances. The pay probably works about about tenner a property.
Whoever decided that AR appliances should be turned off, knew full well that most customers/tenants will turn them straight back on again once the engineer has gone, in fact in a strange way, you could say by servicing a fire without instructions and then labeling it as AR, your encouraging the customer to use it...they'll just see a freshly serviced/checked fire.
 
the number of appliances should have no bearing on safety of the work done. If your rushing to the point of cutting corners then its prob best to find a better job. Ive worked on such contracts and know what some engineers do to get so many jobs done, id rather not be in the trade then put lives at risk.
 
I remember being on a council contract, a whole estate with fire/bbu, Robby willy fire in back room and a cooker, I got it down to where I could get 6/7 done in a day...done properly - whole day and you go home covered in muck. You'd turn in the next morning to hand your jobs in and some other lads are handing 10/11/12 jobs in ( and bragging how they got off a 3pm )....there's no way they could possibly be doing them safely. This is why you'd go to back-boiler and there'd be a load of smoke pellets thrown in behind the burner from previous safety checks.....
 
I went onto a job where i knew lads doing 12 plus a day with maxol 5 units with fires, 1 to 2 other fires and convector heaters in each property. Most of the time id check the name of the last engineer and know if i was in for bad one. you would get the usuall "why are you removing the fire? the last few guys never did that". I found some really bad things, even catchments filled above the appliance spigs.

now i see alot of service engineers just enter a property with there FGA and a few screwdrivers, even tho the MI requires you to strip, inspect and clean when needed. The problem is they are coverd by the contract, if they screw up its a work mate who gets them out of the dodo.
 
I went onto a job where i knew lads doing 12 plus a day with maxol 5 units with fires, 1 to 2 other fires and convector heaters in each property. Most of the time id check the name of the last engineer and know if i was in for bad one. you would get the usuall "why are you removing the fire? the last few guys never did that". I found some really bad things, even catchments filled above the appliance spigs.

now i see alot of service engineers just enter a property with there FGA and a few screwdrivers, even tho the MI requires you to strip, inspect and clean when needed. The problem is they are coverd by the contract, if they screw up its a work mate who gets them out of the dodo.

Same in my game AW, the guv used to moan at me for my site times until I asked him to compare my call back rate to others. Only problem is I now find I have to cover their backsides to the customers for the same pay!
 
I went onto a job where i knew lads doing 12 plus a day with maxol 5 units with fires, 1 to 2 other fires and convector heaters in each property. Most of the time id check the name of the last engineer and know if i was in for bad one. you would get the usuall "why are you removing the fire? the last few guys never did that". I found some really bad things, even catchments filled above the appliance spigs.

now i see alot of service engineers just enter a property with there FGA and a few screwdrivers, even tho the MI requires you to strip, inspect and clean when needed. The problem is they are coverd by the contract, if they screw up its a work mate who gets them out of the dodo.
When you say strip and clean where needed, do you mean if combustion proves to be wrong, or do some boilers require it regardless?
 
It depends what your doing, when i worked for BG, it was just an inspection ( so long as FG analysis was within tolerance )...but then they never claimed it was a service. Full manufacturers service involves cleaning H-E....
 
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