Sorry but nothing like that at all! Surely electricians are always trying to pre-empt unlikely accidents, but as an example - we had a loft conversion done which required the mains fed water tank being moved and the plumber used speedfit? plastic pipe the feed from this rejoins copper pipes to the hot water tank. the cupboard containing
this has cabling for immersion heater , the pump and various other surface mounted cabling! I don't think it is much of an argument to stand up in court and say i never thought they would become live!
Can you answer my question or not, don't mind if i am wrong or not - would just like to know!
Hi Pushrod,
I'll try answer it the way I see it
Any metalwork entering your house (or outbuilding-to stay on topic), could introduce earth potential into the property, especially if originating underground.
In this case you would
bond the metalwork as near to it's entry point as possible.
If this is done to all metalwork
on entry (gas, water, oil, structural), then you create your equipotential zone.
If you touch two metal parts simultaneously, within this zone, you won't get a shock, as all metal will be at the same potential - whether that be 0 volts or 100 volts.
Supplementary bonding, which isn't always required now, is just
additional links between metalwork to keep that
equipotential zone going - e.g. between hot and cold taps
No other metalwork in the house will require bonding, as it can't possibly introduce a potential.
What
will be required is
earthing.
Exposed conductive parts need to be earthed - e.g. cooker casings, washing machine casings, boiler casing and pipework, metal wall lights - the list could go on and on - anything that could become live, under fault conditions, needs to be earthed - not, though, my coffee table
This ensures that the fault will be cleared by the protective device, rather than the exposed conductive part remaining live.
This is the best I can do - maybe someone can be clearer
