Hi,
I've just discovered a card from Transco on top of my gas meter which points out that the gas pipework has no equipotential earth bonding. This was obviously issued prior to my buying this house a month ago and was left there by the previous owner.
I've already mentioned the slightly unusual setup that we have got in this post:
//www.diynot.com/forums/viewtopic.php?p=767848
Basically, in summary, we have got a supply cable that rises up from the floor of the integral garage (but which is presumably fed from an overhead supply because every house in the street apart from mine and the next door neighbour's have an overhead supply cabel to the property).
This goes to the meter and from there to (a) a consumer unit (with MCBs and an RCD) that feeds some of the house and (b) an isolator switch and 60A cartridge fuse that feeds a spur to a second consumer unit (old style with cartridge fuses) in the utility room. This, in turn, has a spur to a modern RCD/MCB protected consumer unit in the external garage/outbuilding.
Outside the integral garage (the one where the supply comes in) we have an earth rod. There is an earth cable which, as far as I can tell, runs from this back to the consumer unit.
There is no obvious sign of any earth wiring connecting to either the gas supply pipe or the incoming water supply pipe.
So, the first question is do I need to earth the incoming water and gas supplies and, if so, can I do it simply by running two earth cables: one from the gas pipe to the earth rod and one from the water pipe to the earth rod?
The next thing is that as far as I can see, there is no separate bonding in the bathrooms. Is this needed? The electrician who did a load of work in a flat I lived in back in the late 90s made a big deal of bonding everything in the bathroom, but a few years later in a different house when I had wiring installed for some bathroom lights and a power shower, the spark who did that said that bonding was not a requirement any more (this was in 2003).
I said in my post about shower pumps that I the shower pipework appeared to be earthed. However, closer inspection reveals I was not necessarily correct.
In terms of the two shower pumps in the loft, one has copper feed pipes from the tanks and then plastic output pipes going to the bathroom. No sign of any earth wiring here.
The other pump has copper pipes for the two inputs and two outputs. There is a short length of earth wire bonding all four of these copper pipes together, above where they go into the flexible inlet/outlet pipes of the pump. Not sure how worthwhile that is, given that the hot and cold pipes from the pump to the shower have several plastic joints in them.
Does any of this sound worrying?
David.
I've just discovered a card from Transco on top of my gas meter which points out that the gas pipework has no equipotential earth bonding. This was obviously issued prior to my buying this house a month ago and was left there by the previous owner.
I've already mentioned the slightly unusual setup that we have got in this post:
//www.diynot.com/forums/viewtopic.php?p=767848
Basically, in summary, we have got a supply cable that rises up from the floor of the integral garage (but which is presumably fed from an overhead supply because every house in the street apart from mine and the next door neighbour's have an overhead supply cabel to the property).
This goes to the meter and from there to (a) a consumer unit (with MCBs and an RCD) that feeds some of the house and (b) an isolator switch and 60A cartridge fuse that feeds a spur to a second consumer unit (old style with cartridge fuses) in the utility room. This, in turn, has a spur to a modern RCD/MCB protected consumer unit in the external garage/outbuilding.
Outside the integral garage (the one where the supply comes in) we have an earth rod. There is an earth cable which, as far as I can tell, runs from this back to the consumer unit.
There is no obvious sign of any earth wiring connecting to either the gas supply pipe or the incoming water supply pipe.
So, the first question is do I need to earth the incoming water and gas supplies and, if so, can I do it simply by running two earth cables: one from the gas pipe to the earth rod and one from the water pipe to the earth rod?
The next thing is that as far as I can see, there is no separate bonding in the bathrooms. Is this needed? The electrician who did a load of work in a flat I lived in back in the late 90s made a big deal of bonding everything in the bathroom, but a few years later in a different house when I had wiring installed for some bathroom lights and a power shower, the spark who did that said that bonding was not a requirement any more (this was in 2003).
I said in my post about shower pumps that I the shower pipework appeared to be earthed. However, closer inspection reveals I was not necessarily correct.
In terms of the two shower pumps in the loft, one has copper feed pipes from the tanks and then plastic output pipes going to the bathroom. No sign of any earth wiring here.
The other pump has copper pipes for the two inputs and two outputs. There is a short length of earth wire bonding all four of these copper pipes together, above where they go into the flexible inlet/outlet pipes of the pump. Not sure how worthwhile that is, given that the hot and cold pipes from the pump to the shower have several plastic joints in them.
Does any of this sound worrying?
David.