Afternoon
A simply question but like confirmation from the more knowledgeable. Can someone confirm if there is a direct short between a line conductor to extraneous pipework I.e water or gas. In what scenarios will the MCB trip or not trip? My own thoughts are that if it has a negligible impedance to earth it will as this will cause the fault current to be high enough to trip the MCB. If it has a high impedance it may not as the fault current may not be enough for it to trip. So following from this situation if a main bonding conductor has been joined to this pipework this would lower the impedance and so make it more likely to trip out. Also if circuit that developed fault was RCD protected because this measures imbalance between line to neutral as soon as this fault became present on pipework it would trip out as we would now have more current travelling through the line and not returning via the neutral?
A simply question but like confirmation from the more knowledgeable. Can someone confirm if there is a direct short between a line conductor to extraneous pipework I.e water or gas. In what scenarios will the MCB trip or not trip? My own thoughts are that if it has a negligible impedance to earth it will as this will cause the fault current to be high enough to trip the MCB. If it has a high impedance it may not as the fault current may not be enough for it to trip. So following from this situation if a main bonding conductor has been joined to this pipework this would lower the impedance and so make it more likely to trip out. Also if circuit that developed fault was RCD protected because this measures imbalance between line to neutral as soon as this fault became present on pipework it would trip out as we would now have more current travelling through the line and not returning via the neutral?