A recent discussion on conduit choice wandered over to pros and cons of the 'conlok' style and a link was posted to one of the Efixx videos in this post:
The related video showing them putting in the cables has normal G/Y CPC pulled in along with the live conductors and that got me wondering about the use of the actual conduit as the CPC. I had assumed it was normal and an advantage of threaded conduit that you could use it as the CPC and only have to put in jumpers from back-boxes (suitably fitted with star washers for paint penetration) to the accessories to ensure a good enough connection. Some questions for folks to debate are:
Which conduit holders for metal conduit?
An alternative might be to use brass for an improved aesthetic...pricey but nicey! https://theworkshopbelow.com/collections/conduit-antique-brass-conduit
www.electriciansforums.net
The related video showing them putting in the cables has normal G/Y CPC pulled in along with the live conductors and that got me wondering about the use of the actual conduit as the CPC. I had assumed it was normal and an advantage of threaded conduit that you could use it as the CPC and only have to put in jumpers from back-boxes (suitably fitted with star washers for paint penetration) to the accessories to ensure a good enough connection. Some questions for folks to debate are:
- Is using the metal conduit as CPC considered poor practice now?
- Is it just the 'conlok' style that you would not trust to be a reliable CPC system?
- If using the conduit as a CPC would you consider adding, say, a single 4mm CPC as a supplementary bond from source to furthest point to povide a 2nd CPC path in the (hopefully unlikely) case that it developed a poor connection at a single point?