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Extraneous conductive parts
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<blockquote data-quote="davidl" data-source="post: 51189" data-attributes="member: 841"><p>Good morning everyone,</p><p></p><p>I have a really silly question here, mainly for clarification. A bathroom has an exposed section of cast iron soil pipe, a radiator and short pipes from the floor, and all other exposed copper pipework is fed via plastic pipework under the floor and inside pipe boxing and all circuits,( in this case only lighting) are protected by an RCBO.</p><p></p><p>The supplymentary equipotential may be ommitted where certain conditions are met, they include rcd protection etc, but the one that is a bit ambiguous is ' all extraneous-coductive parts of the location are effectively connected to the protective equipotential main bonding according to reg 411.3.1.2.'</p><p></p><p>I intend to bond the soil pipe but what about the rad? Seems easier to carry out supplymentary bonding, or am I reading it all wrong.</p><p></p><p>Thanks in advance for the replies.</p><p></p><p>Kind regards</p><p></p><p>David</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="davidl, post: 51189, member: 841"] Good morning everyone, I have a really silly question here, mainly for clarification. A bathroom has an exposed section of cast iron soil pipe, a radiator and short pipes from the floor, and all other exposed copper pipework is fed via plastic pipework under the floor and inside pipe boxing and all circuits,( in this case only lighting) are protected by an RCBO. The supplymentary equipotential may be ommitted where certain conditions are met, they include rcd protection etc, but the one that is a bit ambiguous is ' all extraneous-coductive parts of the location are effectively connected to the protective equipotential main bonding according to reg 411.3.1.2.' I intend to bond the soil pipe but what about the rad? Seems easier to carry out supplymentary bonding, or am I reading it all wrong. Thanks in advance for the replies. Kind regards David [/QUOTE]
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