The purpose of periodic inspection and testing is to determine whether the
installation is satisfactory for continued service. Regulation 731-01-02 requires
inspection, comprising careful scrutiny of the installation, to be carried out without
dismantling or with partial dismantling as required together with the appropriate
tests of Chapter 71.
The inspection and testing is as far as is reasonably possible to provide for:
(i) the safety of persons and livestock against the effects of electric shock and
burns, in accordance with Regulation 130-01;
(ii) protection against damage to property by fire and heat arising from an
installation defect;
(iii) the identification that the installation is not damaged or deteriorated so as
to impair safety;
(iv) identification of installation defects or non-compliance with the
requirements of the Regulations, which may give rise to danger.
The scope or extent of the work is to be decided by a competent person taking into
account the condition of the installation and records of previous inspections.
There is no requirement as such to carry out all the inspections and all the tests of
the initial verification. What is required is inspection comprising careful scrutiny of
the installation without dismantling or with partial dismantling as required
supplemented by testing to determine whether the installation is suitable for
continued service. The requirements are general: defects in the protection against
shock or protection against fire, or identification of damage and installation defects
or non-compliance with the regulations which may give rise to danger, will need to
be identified and reported.
The requirements of Section 732 relate to the frequency of inspection and testing. It
is worth referring to the note by the Health and Safety Executive on page 8 of BS
7671, which says ‘Existing installations may have been designed and installed to
conform to the standards set by earlier editions of the IEE Wiring Regulations or
BS 7671: 1992. This does not mean that they will fail to achieve conformity with
the relevant parts of the Electricity at Work Regulation 1989.’
What is required of a periodic inspection is not a simple reproduction of the tests in
Section 713, but a more general approach which fundamentally is a careful scrutiny
looking for potential hazards and deterioration of the installation, supplemented by
testing where appropriate. From the age of the installation and its use or abuse, an
experienced inspector will know the particular deficiencies to look for. Previous
periodic inspection reports will assist and may help identify deterioration of an
installation.