misterg
Well-Known Member
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As to ISO, RCD and MCA standards my hunch is they are layered over each other to address different needs.
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Sadly not that logical, as far as I can tell.
MCA codes (formerly Board of Trade??) was/is the UK's empyrically based standard for craft construction & operation. Having dipped into bits of it, it looks very prescriptive - if you're doing 'X', this is the way to do it, sort of thing. I would imagine it is highly regarded. There is nothing to enforce it for non commercial small craft. 'Harmonised' code here (1MB pdf)
The RCD is a piece of nothing legislation that introduces 4 categories of leisure boat use, and specifies that boats must be designed & build to withstand conditions appropriate to its category, and must comply with harmonised European standards in certain key areas, which it lists in Annexe 1, together with a raft of appropriate / barely relevant harmonised standards - the ISOs.
The ISOs are the harmonised standards, which are agreed across the EU, and should replace UK only standards (we can't be unfair to our EU brethren, can we?). They therefore (IMHO) tend to fall to the lowest common denominator, but have an authority which is potentially greater than UK only standards. Indeed the UK has to accept these harmonised standards (general point, not specific to boats). Perhaps why so many aren't agreed. Perhaps explains your surveyor's attitude to them.
The ISO standards via the RCD are here, so ultimately they are the minimum requirement (within Europe). All we can hope for is that they are critically reviewed following operational experience, and that common sense & engineering can overcome the various commercial interests on standards commititees.
Not an expert, but I've had some experience of how Standards Committees work.
Andy
As to ISO, RCD and MCA standards my hunch is they are layered over each other to address different needs.
[/ QUOTE ]
Sadly not that logical, as far as I can tell.
MCA codes (formerly Board of Trade??) was/is the UK's empyrically based standard for craft construction & operation. Having dipped into bits of it, it looks very prescriptive - if you're doing 'X', this is the way to do it, sort of thing. I would imagine it is highly regarded. There is nothing to enforce it for non commercial small craft. 'Harmonised' code here (1MB pdf)
The RCD is a piece of nothing legislation that introduces 4 categories of leisure boat use, and specifies that boats must be designed & build to withstand conditions appropriate to its category, and must comply with harmonised European standards in certain key areas, which it lists in Annexe 1, together with a raft of appropriate / barely relevant harmonised standards - the ISOs.
The ISOs are the harmonised standards, which are agreed across the EU, and should replace UK only standards (we can't be unfair to our EU brethren, can we?). They therefore (IMHO) tend to fall to the lowest common denominator, but have an authority which is potentially greater than UK only standards. Indeed the UK has to accept these harmonised standards (general point, not specific to boats). Perhaps why so many aren't agreed. Perhaps explains your surveyor's attitude to them.
The ISO standards via the RCD are here, so ultimately they are the minimum requirement (within Europe). All we can hope for is that they are critically reviewed following operational experience, and that common sense & engineering can overcome the various commercial interests on standards commititees.
Not an expert, but I've had some experience of how Standards Committees work.
Andy