BAS, apologies , i read it quickly and i missed the "a new A"
To which you repliedIs this topic, in fact, to be a long set of questions on random regulations which aren't clear to you?
If so, would you not find it easier to get a good book or two on the regs, as they will have been specifically written to explain them?
Yes BAS it will be a thread of questions. I have yet to recieve my book that I'm going to get and in the mean time I'd just. Like to ask questions here as I go along the book otherwise I'll forget by the time I get the book and than I can make notes in my book ....
Thanks spark but apparently it is 5s.
Two hours after posting that I took my C&G 2382 and that came up! Of all the questions... Going through the regs this last week,there are so many contradictions! by the way, anyone know what 125 v D.C is classed as? Extra low/low/ reduced low/ SELV I went for low
I have no gas pipes and the only pipes on display is in the airing cupboard. If it's connected back to earth via the shower cpc.
Does this defy regulations?and if so how?
Back in May, I raised this concern about the way you seemed to be trying to learn by asking questions with no discernible structure:To which you repliedIs this topic, in fact, to be a long set of questions on random regulations which aren't clear to you?
If so, would you not find it easier to get a good book or two on the regs, as they will have been specifically written to explain them?Yes BAS it will be a thread of questions. I have yet to recieve my book that I'm going to get and in the mean time I'd just. Like to ask questions here as I go along the book otherwise I'll forget by the time I get the book and than I can make notes in my book ....
And you weren't wrong.
Later in that same topic you wrote this:
Thanks spark but apparently it is 5s.
Two hours after posting that I took my C&G 2382 and that came up! Of all the questions... Going through the regs this last week,there are so many contradictions! by the way, anyone know what 125 v D.C is classed as? Extra low/low/ reduced low/ SELV I went for low
Subsequent to that we find that you don't actually know how to do basic design calculations: //www.diynot.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=233723.
Here we find that you're playing around doing testing: //www.diynot.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=238914
Here you're asking about a tool "to use as an electrician": //www.diynot.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=234098
Your history of posts here is still showing an overwhelming tendency to consist of random questions.
In this topic you're asking about how to fill in EICs and yet now we find that you don't even know what supplementary equipotential bonding is.
I don't know what your eventual aim is, or what learning processes you've been through, but they don't seem to have worked very well so far.
Will you PLEASE get yourself onto a properly structured learning programme where you start at the beginning, you start with the basics, and you build up from there in a logical and methodical way.
You just don't get it, do you.Sorry BAS I forgot you're a clever dick who knows everything and has never needed to ask for advice in their life.
I'm sorry that I'm below you in the scale of knowledge in this chosen subject and that you have to stoop down from your high throne to entertain the 'little' people like me.
I'm sorry that I bore your evenings when your reading through people's problems.
But what I am happy for is that I've at least given you something to pick at and break down and insult.
Take care.
You called this topic "Ze query", and began it with "My main bonding conductors...".PS John, I never said it had anything to do with supplementary bonding.
The main bonding conductor to the incoming water does not go back directly to the MET but goes to the shower CPC in the next room.
Can you make your mind up, please?But my two main bonding conductors, one running to my water pipes in the airing cupboard and one to the kitchen, both originate from inside the cutout.
If it is as you have now described then:This to me is wrong because it does not go back to the MET and is as you say a supplementary bonding conductor.
You aren't wrong about that, but you are confused about the purpose of equipotential bonding. It is not earthing.What's confused me is if a live part was put to the pipe a fault current would flow back via the shower cpc. Or am I wrong?
An excellent question.So BAS you are arguing because I flit from question to question like an excited 5 year old asking questions to the grown ups?
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