Ok chaps, so why do we bond lightning conductors???
I've asked quite a few people not one of which has got the foggiest?! Seems idiotic to me
I've asked quite a few people not one of which has got the foggiest?! Seems idiotic to me
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Discuss Bonding in the Australia area at ElectriciansForums.net
Lightning conductors are tied to earth.
I can understand the reasoning, so there can't be a potential between two earthed items. However bonding in a house won't be rated to take a lightning strike?
Extraneous or not, does it not strike you as odd. Imagine during a lightning storm a bolt hits your bonded lightning conductor at the same time you happen to be in the bath! mmmm, toasty!
perhaps that's why we don't supp.bond baths any more.
Being devils advocate, would you class the conducting bars as extraneous? Are they not insulated?
A nearby earth fault may instigate a rise in potential within the lightning rod with respect to other conductive systems within the property. The point of bonding is to minimise such differences in potential within the property. Ligtning rods are typically installed externally but will still form part of the property's systems.
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All I know is I've never seen it bonded before.
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