Discuss Main Bonding plastic pipes in the Electricians' Talk area at ElectriciansForums.net

when we arrived, the woman of the house said, 'i think theres a gas leak because my husband tried to pull the gas cooker out, and we smell gas through the house now, but it cant be that bad, we haven't blown up yet!'

clearly a non smoking residence otherwise it may be different...

but erm the bonding thing? can it be omitted? its a pig of a run if so (its not an excuse just if it isnt needed then that would be cool)
 
Last edited:
regs say it has to be bonded (within 600mm of tap - surely that's on the plastic?!). but what's the chance of anybody ever being exposed to a live fault and touching this section at the same time? (is it next to an appliance?) if it's miles from any circuits / appliances, and a pain to get a bond to the c/u, then i would leave it. if it's right behind the washing machine, bond it
 
regs say it has to be bonded (within 600mm of tap - surely that's on the plastic?!). but what's the chance of anybody ever being exposed to a live fault and touching this section at the same time? (is it next to an appliance?) if it's miles from any circuits / appliances, and a pain to get a bond to the c/u, then i would leave it. if it's right behind the washing machine, bond it

"within 600mm of tap" could be as little as 1mm from the tap and that would be on the copper.

My view is that from the picture posted in this thread there is room for a bonding clamp on the copper IF IT IS NEEDED.

Another thought is what happens if that plastic at some time gets replaced with copper?

Would it need bonding then and if so why not now?
 
It will be under the kitchen units, and the sink will be near to to within 1-2m either side of the stopcock and obviously above it(i cant remember from the drawings) but the sink will be fitted with plastic pipes.

There aren't any circuits near except a socket outlet which will be in a unit 3-4 metres to the right to provide juice to a single oven.

I don't mean to reiterate what i ask, but it's just because the regs are so open to interpretation i would just like to hear you views.

thanks to all the responses so far...
 
I'll probably be shot down for this but imo, whats the worst that could happen if its not bonded strictly in compliance, or even bonded to met at all.....if its realy difficult to run a protective bonding conductor from met to this small peice of extraneous pipe work, then I'd either supplementary bond it or box it in and note on EIC...in all honesty whats the worst that could happen if all pipe work etc is plastic and this piece is hidden under the sink.
 
It will be under the kitchen units, and the sink will be near to to within 1-2m either side of the stopcock and obviously above it(i cant remember from the drawings) but the sink will be fitted with plastic pipes.

There aren't any circuits near except a socket outlet which will be in a unit 3-4 metres to the right to provide juice to a single oven.

I don't mean to reiterate what i ask, but it's just because the regs are so open to interpretation i would just like to hear you views.

thanks to all the responses so far...


You asked a question and were given the correct answer. It's entirely up to you if you want to ignore that answer and happy being responsible for you're actions, or lack of them, depending on what way you look at it!!
 
Just bond it and get it over with.....
If it wasn't for that stop cock being there, I would have considered boxing it in and adding a new stop cock with plastic each side....

Though in a recent site conversation Scottish Water said to me they are keen to remove lead water pipes supplying homes as they tend to leak (mainly as they are getting on in years....). Especially so when your doing building work anyway...SW guy I spoke to said if there had been a lead supply present they would have asked for a trench, installed a duct and alkathene pipework and then disconnected the lead pipework.
 

Reply to Main Bonding plastic pipes in the Electricians' Talk area at ElectriciansForums.net

Similar Threads

Not sure on this one. Mains water is coming up from the ground in lead pipe in bathroom. 2 inches of copper pipe before the stop tap. All...
Replies
4
Views
1K
Hello, Carrying out remedial work on a commercial site and I've come across a metal out building that has a water supply to it. The water pipe...
Replies
6
Views
1K
Disclaimer: I'm not going to attempt this job myself, I want a professional to do this job properly since I consider it non-trivial and need it...
Replies
2
Views
962
Did a eicr on a upstairs flat, there is 1 main bonding cable from the consumer unit, the gas pipe comes from the gas meter outside and up the wall...
Replies
21
Views
3K
Hi, Small flat, currently has a small'ish feed water tank, top of a cupboard, feed through a wall into under stairs cupboard. Hot water tank...
Replies
5
Views
467

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Electrician Courses Green Electrical Goods PCB Way Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Pushfit Wire Connectors Electric Underfloor Heating Electrician Courses
These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then CLICK HERE and post a thread with who you are, and we'll send you some stats etc

YOUR Unread Posts

This website was designed, optimised and is hosted by untold.media Operating under the name Untold Media since 2001.
Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock