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Is your Ex rated equipment repairer up to the job?

03 May 2022

Karl Metcalfe looks at key questions a prospective repair partner should be asked before being commissioned to work on Ex rated equipment, and shares the answers users should expect

WHEN IT comes to repairing or overhauling Ex rated equipment, the competency of the repair provider is critical to end-users maintaining the safety of their sites and staff.

End-users looking to repair Ex rated equipment for use in hazardous areas should always ask a repair provider if it follows the international repair standard, BS EN IEC 60079-19:2019. And the answer should, of course, always be yes.

When end-users send hazardous area equipment away for repair, overhaul, or reclamation, it is essential that they understand their responsibilities, as it is their equipment, and they will be fitting it into a hazardous area on its return. Written within the international standard is the definition of a “user”, which states that they are “primarily responsible for the repair”. If the repairer does not use the international Ex repair standard or follow its guidelines, the user is primarily responsible for this. So, end-users should understand this standard, be able to ask the correct questions of a repairer, know what documentation to expect, and be confident the Ex equipment has been returned fit for purpose.

Responsible person

It is also important to ask the repair provider who their responsible person is. The responsible person at a repair facility is the person that checks the operatives work, creates the paperwork and obtains the correct standards for the equipment in question. They also issue the documentation for the end-user to agree on the work to be carried out and are responsible for ensuring it is carried out to the correct specification.

The responsible person and the end-user should be in close contact throughout the time the equipment is in the repair facility, and so it is important for the repair provider to identify a competent, responsible person. End-users should also ask a repair provider what quality management systems they use.

A quality management system is part of many workplaces, but traceability is vital when looking at Ex equipment repair. The international repair standard requires repairers to keep documentation on all Ex repairs for a minimum of ten years. If an end-user had an incident at its plant, would it be confident that it could produce the documentation for a repair?

If not, could it be confident that the repair facility it used could issue it for a repair it conducted eight years ago? If the repair facility uses a recognised quality management system, this will give the confidence that the documentation will be available if needed.

It is also important to establish whether staff training certificates are still valid. The international Ex repair standard states that staff involved with Ex repairs should undergo training and assessment at intervals not exceeding three years. To comply with this requirement, AEMT members trained in the repair of Ex equipment have their training certificates refreshed every three years.

Proper calibration

Finally, it is crucial to establish whether the repair facility’s measuring equipment is traceable and adequately calibrated. It is important to have complete confidence, backed by documentation, that the repairer only uses calibrated measuring equipment – for both electrical and mechanical measurements. Not only should the equipment be calibrated, but the repairer should be sure that the equipment was measuring correctly at the time of use.

The surest way to ensure a repair facility is competent in the repair of Ex rated equipment, meets the international standard, and gives the correct answers to the questions outlined above, is to choose a repairer from the AEMT’s Ex register. All companies listed on the register have been trained in Ex equipment repair to the International and European standards BS EN IEC 60079-19, and have been assessed as competent.

Karl Metcalfe is technical support at the Association of Electrical and Mechanical Trades

https://bit.ly/ExRegister

Key Points

  • If a repairer does not use the international Ex repair standard or follow its guidelines, the user is primarily responsible for this
  • The responsible person and the end-user should be in close contact throughout the time equipment is in the repair facility
  • It is crucial to establish whether the repair facility’s measuring equipment is traceable and adequately calibrated

 
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