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bonding
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<blockquote data-quote="Brian 157" data-source="post: 74238" data-attributes="member: 2251"><p>The plumber is wrong! If the pipes in the property are metal they should have a main bonding conductor connected to the consumer's pipes as close as practicable to the point of entry (ie just after the main stop tap) before any branches in the pipes and after the meter (if fitted).</p><p></p><p>Of course plastic pipes do not require bonding.</p><p></p><p>See section 544 of BS7671:2008, (pages 134-135) &amp; section 4 of the OSG (pages 27-32)</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Brian 157, post: 74238, member: 2251"] The plumber is wrong! If the pipes in the property are metal they should have a main bonding conductor connected to the consumer's pipes as close as practicable to the point of entry (ie just after the main stop tap) before any branches in the pipes and after the meter (if fitted). Of course plastic pipes do not require bonding. See section 544 of BS7671:2008, (pages 134-135) & section 4 of the OSG (pages 27-32) [/QUOTE]
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