Manator
©Honorary Essex Boy™
Thats a fist Steptoe and ADS agreeing.
No, we have actually agreed before - though you might have to go back a bit to find it.Thats a fist Steptoe and ADS agreeing.
Where?It was NIC but it was in the regs black and White.
catch up Sellers, been through that earlier. Hope the assessment went well.You cannot just omit cross bonding if all your bathroom circuits are RCD protection
The discussion was whether the pipework in the bathroom was extraneous. And no I don't work to the regs cos I'm a completely dangerous **** who's trying to kill peopleIf the pipe that re-enters the building is 'extraneous',
Anybody ready to commit to a reply yet?Now the question. Does the new gas pipe in the bathroom also require bonding? (And why, or why not).
Have you got your threads mixed up, Sidey? ?:|NO need to bond to the pipe the other end of the factory either! If it is steel framed just bond to the steel either end! ; )
How far down the road of mods to you allow for the idiots?
What if someone decides to connect a 60A load to a 1mm sq lighting circuit you have just installed & sets the place on fire, is that your fault?...
Why does BS7671 state that we need to bond incoming services to the MET?. Those services are capable of introducing a different earth potential to the property than that earth potential which exists at the MET of the electrical installation, therefore an equipotential zone is required where there are no potential differences. Therefore the second gas pipe entry point is not going to introduce a different earth potential so IMHO it does not need bonding to the MET.That, Slips, is what I was hoping people would discuss. Is it correct to (main) bond at two separate points on a single service? Or is it correct to rely on the original bond even though, effectively, the service leaves the building at one point and re-enters at another?
OK then.Actually I am very concerned that no-one has counter argued the above - it's a bit weird :^O
Bonding has nothing to do with fault current travelling down anywhere..............it is to equalise 'potentials' on metalwork, within a location, under fault conditions - i.e. so there is no 'potential difference' between two accessible pieces of metalwork.As for the bathroom, given full RCD protection, and meeting the relavant criteria in regs, I wouldn't have thought it necessary to bond at this point - again I would argue pipe has more copper than the bond wire ergo any fault current would travel down pipe first to your MEB anyway,
But in the OPs scenario, it might do.Why does BS7671 state that we need to bond incoming services to the MET?. Those services are capable of introducing a different earth potential to the property than that earth potential which exists at the MET of the electrical installation, therefore an equipotential zone is required where there are no potential differences. Therefore the second gas pipe entry point is not going to introduce a different earth potential so IMHO it does not need bonding to the MET.
You would hope that fault current would mostly travel down CPC, but as leccy tends to travel down path of least resistance, then there is a possibility from appliances that some or all fault current may flow along pipework. There must also be some relationship between bond size and time it takes to equalise potential, so CSA of copper bond or pipes must have some effect hence we now use 10mm instead of 6mm like we used to many years ago.OK then. Bonding has nothing to do with fault current travelling down anywhere..............it is to equalise 'potentials' on metalwork, within a location, under fault conditions - i.e. so there is no 'potential difference' between two accessible pieces of metalwork.
So, totally nothing to do with how fat your copper pipe is.
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