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CORGI Gas Workers
Nile
Posts: 14,766 Forumite
By law gas workers must be registered with CORGI, the Council for Registered Gas Installers.
They must produce their CORGI ID card before work commences. Take the card and examine both sides. On the reverse side of the card, it will state what work they are competent/qualified to undertake.
Be aware that the guys who fit kitchens will have a CORGI card for the gas hobs they fit but they won't necessarily be competent or qualified to work on your gas fire and central heating boiler!
Another tip to look out for when selecting the firm/individual to do your work, the CORGI registration number is a series of digits. Those with the fewer digits have been registered longest.
The gas installer who repaired our central heating system recently has a four digit CORGI registration number. He was registered with CORGI when it was only voluntary (it is now mandatory) and has many years of experience. The info might help you to choose your gas worker/installer/firm.
They must produce their CORGI ID card before work commences. Take the card and examine both sides. On the reverse side of the card, it will state what work they are competent/qualified to undertake.
Be aware that the guys who fit kitchens will have a CORGI card for the gas hobs they fit but they won't necessarily be competent or qualified to work on your gas fire and central heating boiler!
Another tip to look out for when selecting the firm/individual to do your work, the CORGI registration number is a series of digits. Those with the fewer digits have been registered longest.
The gas installer who repaired our central heating system recently has a four digit CORGI registration number. He was registered with CORGI when it was only voluntary (it is now mandatory) and has many years of experience. The info might help you to choose your gas worker/installer/firm.
10 Dec 2007 - Led Zeppelin - I was there. :j [/COLOR]:cool2: I wear my 50 (gold/red/white) blood donations pin badge with pride. [/SIZE][/COLOR]Give blood, save a life. [/B]
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Nile - why not do a safety article - money saving safety tips for the home - and put it in the articles section?Martin Lewis, Money Saving Expert.
Please note, answers don't constitute financial advice, it is based on generalised journalistic research. Always ensure any decision is made with regards to your own individual circumstance.Don't miss out on urgent MoneySaving, get my weekly e-mail at www.moneysavingexpert.com/tips.Debt-Free Wannabee Official Nerd Club: (Honorary) Members number 0000 -
I don't see that these 'articles' I've posted are money saving.
All I'm trying to do is to share my experiences with everyone and hopefully it will provoke some people into action (installing detectors) and keep safety in homes as a priority.
I'm not claiming to be an expert, I'm just sharing information.10 Dec 2007 - Led Zeppelin - I was there. :j [/COLOR]:cool2: I wear my 50 (gold/red/white) blood donations pin badge with pride. [/SIZE][/COLOR]Give blood, save a life. [/B]0 -
most of the info on this site is from lay people sharing what they know or have found out - very few people are experts - your tips will be seen as money saving by most people. I had no idea that smaller numbers meant longer registration - it's like the Jersey number plate system! This site is really about consumer power as much as money saving. Go on Nile ..... *grin*Blah0
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My cousin has been a Corgi registered plumber for many years. As of next year, all Corgi registered plumbers need to become electrically qualified as well - or lose their Corgi status! So he tells me....0
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Although living just on the outskirts of Edinburgh I am in an area without "town" gas and have to rely on LPG. As I just purchased a new gas hob along with an electric built-in oven. I now find that to be able to fit an LPG hob the Corgi registered fitter also has to sit an exam and have a licence for LPG. Very few companies seem to have this licence so I now have a new oven installed and a new hob still sitting in its box :'(
About six years ago we applied for a gas supply and were told it would cost £2,000 per house with a minimum of 13 houses uptake, last year we applied again to be told it would be £6,000 per house with a minimum of 9 houses! So "town" gas for us is obviously not a necessity but considered a luxury item.
So I would take any registered LPG Corgi fitter no matter what size his number is, lol0 -
Nile, I agree with Noonoo that safety tips are money saving. One of the most expensive things that can happen is you injure yourself and can't work or you damage something expensive, like burning your house down. No matter how good your insurance, it can't really make up for it. And no amount of money could make up for injuries, or worse, to a loved one.
So, even if safety tips seem to be expensive in the short-term they could be saving immeasurable amounts in the long-run.
And Cynthia, why on earth would you think you should have mains gas? It's not as if you'd want central heating because it's cold or anything in Scotland...
I know how quickly it changes from urban to countryside in Scotland, but I was surprised to see you're close to the capital but still can't have "town" gas. Poor show.0 -
I've read the posts in I WANNA about boilers, central heating and whether it's worth signing up for a contract.
Thought resurrecting this post to page 1 might help.10 Dec 2007 - Led Zeppelin - I was there. :j [/COLOR]:cool2: I wear my 50 (gold/red/white) blood donations pin badge with pride. [/SIZE][/COLOR]Give blood, save a life. [/B]0 -
It definatly does help thank you m8 :-)-34k to 0 from september '05
Debt Free, Stoozing King, Shrewd spender0 -
I've resurrected this post to help Sarahsaver (New Boiler Post) in the 'I wanna' thread.
If you read my first post on this thread, you'll see that it is wise to carefully read your CORGI worker's registration card. The lower the CORGI number (fewer digits) means that your CORGI worker has been registered longer/has greater experience/possibly registered well before it became mandatory.
One thing I've not mentioned before, my CORGI worker told me that there are new regulations coming into force shortly (2005?). Boilers bought and installed in 2005? will have to conform to new standards on efficiency etc.
Is it possible that you can hold on until next year, to take advantage of buying a superior boiler model?
Ask your CORGI worker for advice and be sure to check his/her qualifications (listed on the reverse of the card) carefully.10 Dec 2007 - Led Zeppelin - I was there. :j [/COLOR]:cool2: I wear my 50 (gold/red/white) blood donations pin badge with pride. [/SIZE][/COLOR]Give blood, save a life. [/B]0 -
Does anyone know how to pick your electric person?Torgwen..........
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