I have to get some certs in order fairly sharpish and am having real trouble finding main bonding in a high school. I'm hoping someone could give me some pointers for this type of setup.
They have several boiler rooms round the school with gas entering and water coming up out of the ground in at least 20 places in big 5" pipe or similar. I have gained access to most of the cupboards where gas comes up out of the ground and followed it to the boilers, there's no bonding in between. Also have followed water coming in for at least a few metres on each pipe until it branches off to other pipes etc and can't find any bonding on those either.
In this sort of large setup would the bonding be done differently? I haven't been able to find any sort of an MET to look for anything going out but even then might not be able to follow the whole run to check where it's going. In any case surely there won't be 30 different 50mm bonds coming out of it running off to all the different incoming pipes around the school will there?
They've had lots of work done in the past and I'm not sure whether or not these other contractors will have bothered to check for bonding. If I did a small job in a room with no extraneous conductive parts I'm sure main bonding would still have to be checked. Would it be acceptable to measure resistance between a socket earth and something like a radiator in the room? It would take days to go around and check every incoming service so what would the NIC inspector expect you to do in this case? Spend 2 hours adding a spur then another 2 days finding gas pipes and confirming connections? Would you just check the area you're working in? I'm confused for this setup.
I have jobs that need certificating but not sure what to do about ticking the box on the cert to show bonding has been checked when I can't find any! In a large setup like this would you guys go off round the site looking for incoming services or just check the nearest water and gas pipes?
They have several boiler rooms round the school with gas entering and water coming up out of the ground in at least 20 places in big 5" pipe or similar. I have gained access to most of the cupboards where gas comes up out of the ground and followed it to the boilers, there's no bonding in between. Also have followed water coming in for at least a few metres on each pipe until it branches off to other pipes etc and can't find any bonding on those either.
In this sort of large setup would the bonding be done differently? I haven't been able to find any sort of an MET to look for anything going out but even then might not be able to follow the whole run to check where it's going. In any case surely there won't be 30 different 50mm bonds coming out of it running off to all the different incoming pipes around the school will there?
They've had lots of work done in the past and I'm not sure whether or not these other contractors will have bothered to check for bonding. If I did a small job in a room with no extraneous conductive parts I'm sure main bonding would still have to be checked. Would it be acceptable to measure resistance between a socket earth and something like a radiator in the room? It would take days to go around and check every incoming service so what would the NIC inspector expect you to do in this case? Spend 2 hours adding a spur then another 2 days finding gas pipes and confirming connections? Would you just check the area you're working in? I'm confused for this setup.
I have jobs that need certificating but not sure what to do about ticking the box on the cert to show bonding has been checked when I can't find any! In a large setup like this would you guys go off round the site looking for incoming services or just check the nearest water and gas pipes?
Last edited: