Yes. All main bonds can go back to the DB. This is usually the case.
Essex's statement is only partially correct. You should have either; two individual bonding conductors from water and gas back to electrical earth, or you can have one continuous (unbroken) bonding conductor looping both gas and water back to electrical earth. But it must not be electrical earth to pipe'A' then second bonding conductor from pipe'A' to pipe'B'. So if the pipe clamp at the water pipe was disconnected there must still be earth continuity to the gas pipe.
Doc H.
The regulation is very simple in terms of application. The reason for a continuous connection is that the one cable will still be connected to one or the other when disconnected, for testing or maintenance purposes.Why not? Did they remove the use of metallic pipes as a bonding conductor from the regulations?
They have never applied a rule that pipes form part of the bonding process, and as such have never been accepted or considered suitable as a bonding link.
might be worth putting a sticker on or near the gas meter stating location of gas bond next time. Could save a re-visit for someone. Although odds are the gas operative would just write "not within 600mm" anywayI had an unusual one on a recent EICR
Gas meter outside. Galvanised steel gas pipe along the bottom of the wall, then up the wall into the loft, changing to copper pipe just before it entered the loft. No visible earth outside.
Crawl into the loft, passed all the owners junk, squeeze down into the eaves, and there, under the loft insulation is the earth bond on the copper gas pipe just as it enters the loft space.
Why do I get the feeling the next gas inspector is just going to say "gas not bonded"?
I had an unusual one on a recent EICR
Gas meter outside. Galvanised steel gas pipe along the bottom of the wall, then up the wall into the loft, changing to copper pipe just before it entered the loft. No visible earth outside.
Crawl into the loft, passed all the owners junk, squeeze down into the eaves, and there, under the loft insulation is the earth bond on the copper gas pipe just as it enters the loft space.
Why do I get the feeling the next gas inspector is just going to say "gas not bonded"?
Surely if the next upgrade of the wiring regs could do just one thing that's remotely useful, it would be to update the electricians bonding regs and the gas man's bonding regs so they were actually the SAME.
This 600mm 'rule' is people taking the regs (544.1.2) too literally, note the keyword - practicable!
The before any branches make sense and near to the meter. I reckon the 600mm thing just loosely defines a 'standard' location for the connection, so it can be readily locateable.
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