How FRZ reviews its load-planning pages.
FRZ Load Check is written as a practical planning resource for temporary heaters, drying kit, fans and portable AC. The pages are reviewed around deterministic load maths, visible evidence, UK plug/socket context and clear stop-condition wording.
What the pages are based on
Tool outputs use deterministic load maths: watts divided by volts for amps, simultaneous loads added together, warning points compared with the selected socket or circuit rating, and red flags kept visible. Where a guide mentions photos or labels, it means visible facts only: nameplate watts/amps, plug condition, lead rating, cable route and breaker labels visible without touching anything.
How content is reviewed
Pages are reviewed for plain language, UK electrical context, internal consistency with the tools, and safety-boundary wording. Red or stop-condition scenarios must stay red/stop in summaries, guides and assistant-style handoff notes. The site avoids EICR, PAT, certificate, permission-to-run and hidden-wiring claims.
When pages are updated
FRZ pages should be updated when tool behaviour changes, when a guide is expanded, when a broken link or unclear sentence is found, when a safety-boundary phrase is too loose, or when user demand shows a repeated question that deserves a clearer example or decision table.
Corrections
If a page has a calculation error, broken link, unclear warning or wording that sounds like it gives permission to run equipment, it should be corrected. Use the contact page to flag the exact URL, the sentence or result, and what looks wrong.
What FRZ does not do
FRZ does not inspect hidden wiring, test protective devices, assess socket condition behind the faceplate, replace site rules, or certify equipment. If the setup is unclear, damaged, wet, hot, repeatedly tripping or outside the entered limits, the correct next step is to stop and ask a competent electrician, supplier or responsible person.