Earth bonding does my head in. One moment I think I've understood, the next I'm reading some MIs that say I must install supplementary bonding where I'd least expect it.
Please could the people who know comment on the following? Thanks.
The status quo was a 1st floor flat with an immersion heated copper cylinder (Econony 7) with two elements. The mains water entered the flat in a shared service cupboard (ground floor of course), changed to copper, through a brass stop cock, then up to the flat, appeared in the airing cupboard in copper, through another brass stop cock, then converted to plastic pipework and distributed around the flat (except for one 15mm copper feed to an electric shower).
The hot water from the cylinder was in copper, but like the cold it was distributed in plastic pipework.
Thus far, I can't see any external conductive parts entering the bathroom. BTW, there's no sign of any bonding in the airing cupboard or under the bath.
Then I installed a pump in the airing cupboard - single impeller on the hot output from the cylinder. The copper pipe was cut and the the coupling to the pump were all plastic. The electrical supply to the pump is via a new unswitched fused connection unit with a 3 Amp fuse installed - this FCU is a spur off the peak-time IH supply, which itself is fed in 2.5 mm² T&E and protected by a B16 MCB.
The pump MIs say that supplementary bonding must be applied when a copper pipe is breached by the installation, leading me to ask the following questions:
1. Is this correct in this scenario?
2. Is this correct in any scenario?
Please could the people who know comment on the following? Thanks.
The status quo was a 1st floor flat with an immersion heated copper cylinder (Econony 7) with two elements. The mains water entered the flat in a shared service cupboard (ground floor of course), changed to copper, through a brass stop cock, then up to the flat, appeared in the airing cupboard in copper, through another brass stop cock, then converted to plastic pipework and distributed around the flat (except for one 15mm copper feed to an electric shower).
The hot water from the cylinder was in copper, but like the cold it was distributed in plastic pipework.
Thus far, I can't see any external conductive parts entering the bathroom. BTW, there's no sign of any bonding in the airing cupboard or under the bath.
Then I installed a pump in the airing cupboard - single impeller on the hot output from the cylinder. The copper pipe was cut and the the coupling to the pump were all plastic. The electrical supply to the pump is via a new unswitched fused connection unit with a 3 Amp fuse installed - this FCU is a spur off the peak-time IH supply, which itself is fed in 2.5 mm² T&E and protected by a B16 MCB.
The pump MIs say that supplementary bonding must be applied when a copper pipe is breached by the installation, leading me to ask the following questions:
1. Is this correct in this scenario?
2. Is this correct in any scenario?