It is not likely the cpc was inadequate the only time this may apply was when 2.5 cables had 1.0 cpcs on BS3036 30A fuses.
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Discuss Shower supply, ever needed additional earth cable. in the Electrical Wiring, Theories and Regulations area at ElectriciansForums.net
was in 16th, all electrical equipment in bathroom supplementary bonded to each other like spaghetti. ( except the metal windows and bog flush. these were the preserve of D.W. cock something.
Supplementary bonding is not there to reduce the Zs. It's there to keep the touch voltage at a safe level until disconnection occurs.Could be that the T&E had too small a CPC, so required Supplementary bonding for the Zs.
That’s supplementary equipotential protective bonding.Supplementary bonding is not there to reduce the Zs. It's there to keep the touch voltage at a safe level until disconnection occurs.
It is not defined as "supplementary equipotential protective bonding" in BS7671, so I'm unclear as to what point you were trying to make.That’s supplementary equipotential protective bonding.
Sorry.It is not defined as "supplementary equipotential protective bonding" in BS7671, so I'm unclear as to what point you were trying to make.
Yes it did. And so did the 17th. My point was that this was not there to reduce the Zs but to maintain the touch voltage at a safe level until disconnection occurred (even though this would not be within the prescribed disconnection times).Point is this:
The 16th allowed supplementary bonding to be used where a low enough value of Zs for ADS could not be achieved.
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