Yet another discussion in another thread has moved me to again ponder the question of when SB IS required in bathrooms etc.
Firstly, there appears to be ambiguity in the regs about what needs to have SB, if/when SB is needed at all …
It is often pointed out that 415.2.1 talks only about SB being applied to “all simultaneously accessible exposed conductive-parts of fixed equipment and extraneous-conductive-parts”. However, 701.415.2, which is the primary reg which (sometimes) requires SB in bathrooms says nothing about exposed-c-ps or “simultaneously accessible”, talking only about CPCs:
As I’ve often said, none of my bathrooms have any exposed-c-ps, and I’m sure my house is not unique in that respect. In that situation, 415.2.1 clearly would/could not require SB (since there is nothing to bond), but 701.415.2 would (unless conditions for omission were satisfied, and assuming that were some extraneous-c-ps) require SB to be installed, and connected to all the CPCs.
Moving to the “criteria for omission of SB" (701.415.2), the first point is a rather silly one, which I suspect is an oversight on the part of the authors. The list of ‘criteria for omission is prefaced by “Where the location containing a bath or shower is in a building with a protective equipotential bonding system in accordance with Regulation 411.3.1.2 …. “. With the increasing prevalence of plastic gas and water supply pipes, there must be an increasing number of buildings which cannot have PEB, since there are no extraneous-c-ps (extraneous to the building) to be bonded - but, taken literally, this reg would mean that SB would always be needed in bathrooms in such a case! It would be better if it said “PEB if/when required”.
As for the actual ‘criteria for omission’ (implicit and explicit), if there is main bonding and if (per current requirements) all circuits in the bathroom were RCD-protected, then all we are left with are:
1… (implicitly) for SB to be required, there must be at least one extraneous-c-p (extraneous to the room) - otherwise there is nothing to 'supplementarily bond'.
and, per the reg …
2… All those extraneous-c-ps must be effectively connected to the PEB, the test being the “50/Ia" criterion of 415.2.2
3… That all final circuits in the room comply with the requirements for ADS.
Of those, (3) will obviously be satisfied in an otherwise-compliant installation, leaving us with just (1) and (2) - and I am seriously struggling to think of any real-world situations in which that would not the case …
… in practice, when a pipe enters a bathroom, it will either be connected to the MET via metal pipework and CPCs (hence < <50/Ia) or else will be isolated from the MET by bits of plastic plumbing, in which case the resistance will be sufficiently high (>23kΩ or whatever) for it to be deemed to not be an extraneous-c-p.
So, given RCD protection, main bonding and satisfactory ADS, when, if ever, is SB going to be needed in a bathroom?
Kind Regards, John
Firstly, there appears to be ambiguity in the regs about what needs to have SB, if/when SB is needed at all …
It is often pointed out that 415.2.1 talks only about SB being applied to “all simultaneously accessible exposed conductive-parts of fixed equipment and extraneous-conductive-parts”. However, 701.415.2, which is the primary reg which (sometimes) requires SB in bathrooms says nothing about exposed-c-ps or “simultaneously accessible”, talking only about CPCs:
… Local supplementary protective equipotential bonding according to Regulation 415.2 shall be established connecting together the terminals of the protective conductor of each circuit supplying Class I and Class II equipment to the accessible extraneous-conductive-parts ….
As I’ve often said, none of my bathrooms have any exposed-c-ps, and I’m sure my house is not unique in that respect. In that situation, 415.2.1 clearly would/could not require SB (since there is nothing to bond), but 701.415.2 would (unless conditions for omission were satisfied, and assuming that were some extraneous-c-ps) require SB to be installed, and connected to all the CPCs.
Moving to the “criteria for omission of SB" (701.415.2), the first point is a rather silly one, which I suspect is an oversight on the part of the authors. The list of ‘criteria for omission is prefaced by “Where the location containing a bath or shower is in a building with a protective equipotential bonding system in accordance with Regulation 411.3.1.2 …. “. With the increasing prevalence of plastic gas and water supply pipes, there must be an increasing number of buildings which cannot have PEB, since there are no extraneous-c-ps (extraneous to the building) to be bonded - but, taken literally, this reg would mean that SB would always be needed in bathrooms in such a case! It would be better if it said “PEB if/when required”.
As for the actual ‘criteria for omission’ (implicit and explicit), if there is main bonding and if (per current requirements) all circuits in the bathroom were RCD-protected, then all we are left with are:
1… (implicitly) for SB to be required, there must be at least one extraneous-c-p (extraneous to the room) - otherwise there is nothing to 'supplementarily bond'.
and, per the reg …
2… All those extraneous-c-ps must be effectively connected to the PEB, the test being the “50/Ia" criterion of 415.2.2
3… That all final circuits in the room comply with the requirements for ADS.
Of those, (3) will obviously be satisfied in an otherwise-compliant installation, leaving us with just (1) and (2) - and I am seriously struggling to think of any real-world situations in which that would not the case …
… in practice, when a pipe enters a bathroom, it will either be connected to the MET via metal pipework and CPCs (hence < <50/Ia) or else will be isolated from the MET by bits of plastic plumbing, in which case the resistance will be sufficiently high (>23kΩ or whatever) for it to be deemed to not be an extraneous-c-p.
So, given RCD protection, main bonding and satisfactory ADS, when, if ever, is SB going to be needed in a bathroom?
Kind Regards, John