@@richierich8334 yes 🙌 easy method that keeps the cables behind the plaster we’ll. better than capping and better that the metal twin and earth clips you can buy.
Never fails to provide top notch videos! Keep up the ace work mate, love the explanations and demonstrations you give in your videos. Absolute class as always👌🏻😁
Had a discussion with an electrician about accessible isolation switches for fixed appliances. His view was that isolation switches in adjacent cupboards are not ' accessible ' and that grid switchs should be used. Seems a lot more work to me.
@@kieranhartnett4459 The electrician is talking rubbish! Grid switches are always switching appliances on different walls. They are an ok method, but for me it takes a heck of a lot longer and I find people who do that just put a socket under the plinths for each appliance to plug into. Or put them behind so the appliances don’t push back fully
@@billsbasementworkshop1902 heya bill! Not at all, it’s a nice smooth penny washer. If you compare this method to the fire rated, Sharp metal twin and earth clips, penny washers are far supreme
I like what you done with the washers instead of capping. Never seen that before.
@@richierich8334 yes 🙌 easy method that keeps the cables behind the plaster we’ll. better than capping and better that the metal twin and earth clips you can buy.
I like the penny washer fixings. I might pinch that idea 👍🏻
@@Poorlybobsdad yes it’s ace ain’t it! Super fast
Never fails to provide top notch videos! Keep up the ace work mate, love the explanations and demonstrations you give in your videos. Absolute class as always👌🏻😁
@@YoungBobby98 Thank you young Bobby! Need this after the week I’ve had 😂 a lot of opposition and set backs currently, but we are getting there!
@ yhh man it happens but you’ll get through the thick of it, top bloke with top videos! Its better than working in a factory all day😭
Had a discussion with an electrician about accessible isolation switches for fixed appliances. His view was that isolation switches in adjacent cupboards are not ' accessible ' and that grid switchs should be used. Seems a lot more work to me.
@@kieranhartnett4459 The electrician is talking rubbish! Grid switches are always switching appliances on different walls. They are an ok method, but for me it takes a heck of a lot longer and I find people who do that just put a socket under the plinths for each appliance to plug into. Or put them behind so the appliances don’t push back fully
@@finneyelectrical Agree. AIso think interior designers like switched kept off the splasbacks
@@kieranhartnett4459 totaly right! Less busy the better, sockets and switches only for me 😀
Are you not worried that the washers clipping the cable will evenualy cause possible short circuits?
@@billsbasementworkshop1902 heya bill! Not at all, it’s a nice smooth penny washer. If you compare this method to the fire rated, Sharp metal twin and earth clips, penny washers are far supreme
I know it's ok , but i still don't like horizontal runs ...and it's not too much work to drop up & down behind base units ...
More work for same regs, sometimes you can’t do that if there’s gaps in the units