wasnt leaking when he left, what more can you expect of a plumber.
Honesty!
When specifically asked if the existing fittings would cope with the much higher pressure, the plumber recommending it could have given one of the answers others have posted here, that it's not possible to be sure, or that being nearly-sure risked causing a water leak in itself - instead, he said it would be fine and that he'd check the fittings could cope as part of the job. Not the slightest suggestion of any risk involved, quite the opposite. That, legally, morally and IMO professionally, is where he screwed up badly. (As he has since admitted, to be fair, and done what he can to put it right; after a little lawyering, it sank in that both parties had had a narrow escape.)
I would be grateful if someone could clarify their explanation about white v blue fittings, which sounds like something immediately obvious with even a brief glance at the fittings they were supposedly checking as part of the job quoted for. I posted this question here because they were hiding behind their 1.5 bar air test as being enough to support their assurances; as a physicist that sounded like nonsense, so I wanted the plumbing view. (It sounded to me a lot like "I tested this car's brakes at 30mph, so it must be fine for motorway use", "this extension cord's tested for 110V at 15 amps, so I'll use it for your 30A 240V ring main and hope it's OK"...)
B&Q and their fitters are the ones to blame imho.
They did a poor job*, perhaps, but their work held up fine as installed for years: it was only after this outfit made the change they'd promised would be OK that there was any problem. Legally (per Trading Standards lawyer), B&Q are off the hook there unless the "white" fittings (whatever those are) are actually prohibited for plumbing use: the increased pressure is a '
novus actus interveniens', not to mention this outfit's breach of contract by not even glancing at the fittings. Tell a customer about a risk and make sure they understand and accept it, that's one thing: sell them something and promise you'll do something that avoids the risk you ignored and they asked about, you are in for a whole world of pain when you let them down.
I had eye surgery last year. There was a detailed consent form explaining the risks and possible side-effects or complications (as standard for medical procedures), and I discussed the risks and how they would be reduced and dealt with if necessary beforehand. It wasn't a perfect outcome - but they didn't promise one, and did take the appropriate steps we'd discussed beforehand to address them. When you risk flooding a customer's house, potentially causing structural damage and tens of thousands of pounds of damage, shouldn't you tell the customer first?! The plumbers on this thread all seem to agree on that point at least.
Bottom line: shouldn't getting paid to "check those fittings, particularly the bathroom ones" involve at least seeing them? Wouldn't a proper plumber admit to the risks of much higher pressure when asked?
* It included fly-tipping in the garden: dumping a used bathroom suite from their previous job round the corner, to pick up later and save on disposal fees, as well as breaking a phone socket. Not impressive stuff, but at least the ceiling was still dry afterwards, unlike this unvented cylinder fiasco.