Agreed. Not necessary.he suggested that i bond all pipes work together with 10mm earth wire,
Agreed. Not necessary.he suggested that i bond all pipes work together with 10mm earth wire,
To avoid confusion/complaints, I've started a new thread (here)Just a 'holding reply' (things I hate receiving)! .... You ask some interesting and valid questions. I am currently thinking as deeply as I can about some uncertainties and 'cans of worms' in my mind, and will attempt to respond soon if/when my thinking achieves anything - hopefully tomorrow! ...
As I explained yesterday, one can present an opposite argument - that if one touched something live ("such as iron lead, washing machine lead or any other flex with bad insulation or nicks etc.") and simultaneously touched a pipe, radiator or tap one would get a sock if that pipe/radiator/tap were earthed, but not if it were not earthed (if that were possible, which virtually never is the case). However, in any event, as i said yesterday and as you say now ....... insisted that in the event of any electrical appliance in utility room such as iron lead, washing machine lead or any other flex with bad insulation or nicks etc comes into contact with any of the copper pipe works, it may carry fault currents into the bathroom upstairs where the occupants in the bath may get electrocuted if he touched bath or sink tap whilst touching the CH radiator, ...
Quite so. As I said, any pipework/radiators/taps/whatever to do with CH and/or HW will inevitable be earthed. The only possible exception are cold water pipes - if all storage/header tanks are plastic, there are no metal mixer taps and no places where H & C taps are both attached to the same metal tank etc., then it is possible that the cold pipework (and taps etc.) will remain unearthed. However, ironically, such a cold water pipe does not feature amongst the pipes in the vicinity of a boiler which plumbers (but not usually electricians) love to bond together - so they may well miss the one that (in some people's eyes) might actually 'benefit' from being earthed!... however, it is easy to see that in fact all pipework is earthed or at the same potential through the boiler chassis, since all pipes also connect to the boiler including the gas mains which is also earth bonded at the meter cupboard where both electric and gas meters are.
All true. Knowledge, competence and experience progressively increase throughout any career. However, one has the right to expect that anyone practising, in any field (and particularly if practising alone) is adequately knowledgeable and competent to do things properly and safely (particularly give that the vast number of customers/whatever will 'know no better') - think doctors or airline pilotsVery true John, and Efl, but we all must learn to walk before we can run, we are all getting old, retiring, new generation are coming into the scene, with less experience, this electrician was relatively young man, and I could not afford to delay getting an ECIR as now required by law, so had to do what he asked for, but over time these young men will gain more experience and get better knowledge, and understanding, but better to be safe than to be sorry ...
That's an interesting one. I obviously cannot know what would be the case with your electrician, but the plumbers who go around 'bonding' countless pipes together in the vicinity of boilers, or in airing cupboards, will generally insist on doing that even when there was an incoming metal water pipe that was properly bonded to the installation's earth! ... and, in any event, as I think we have agreed, that's only relevant to cold water pipes, since the CH and HW ones will (if all copper) inevitably be connected to the installation's earth.... if the supply (water) was metal and bonded to earth at incoming suppliers earth, then definitely it would not have been an issue, or not required at all ....
... and glad to see that you obviously have, too. Not only have we so far survived Covid but we have also so far survived our second doses of AZ vaccine, albeit less than 2 weeks ago You keep safe, too.Glad to see you guys have made through waves of covid..... stay safe.
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