OP
Deleted member 9648
And I got shouted at when I proved bonding to the nearest point on a gas pipe would give a better reading than fighting to get a to the meter.
Given the wall thickness of BS copper pipe to be 0.8mm 15 / 22mm provide a far better conductive path than even 16mm cable.
Where:
Od = outer diameter
Id = inner diameter
π*(Od/2)²-π*(Id/2)²=CSA/mm²
15mm ≡ 39.69mm² ∴ 248.06% ↑
22mm ≡ 53.28mm² ∴ 362.75% ↑
% improvement based on 16mm²
i'm totally with you there, tony. our gas is bonded on the gas pipe where it passes within 6" of the CU. sod drilling a 11" cavity wall into the garage just to run an extra 20ft. to the point of entry.
Especially as it is a continuas copper pipe but you have raised the old BG chestnut where they make their money on as O Dear your gas pipe is not earthed properly as the earth bond is not at the meter
You miss the whole point of bonding,it should be bonded at the point of entry because it's purpose is to deal with a potential introduced by the pipe from externally.
Conductivity of the pipe etc is totally irrelevant.It should be bonded at the point of entry because there,whatever alterations to the pipework take place in the property it will still serve it's purpose.This is not the case if bonding takes place elsewhere.