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Bonding a metal bath

Good evening


I am having one of those moments where I can’t sleep because I am worrying about something I probably don’t need to. That’s the rational part of me talking, unfortunately the anxiety monster won’t b***** off. 


We have just had our old cast iron bath replaced with a nice new shiny steel one. The old bath was bonded back to the terminal block by main consumer unit over 6mm earth cable via the airing cupboard. We also have an electric shower. 


The new bath has no taps on it (they are wall-mounted and fed by copper pipes). The waste is all plastic. The electric shower has been replaced with a new electric shower. The copper pipes in the airing cupboard have been connected via a new 4mm earth cable. My electrician says that according to the 18th edition, there is no requirement for the metal bath to be bonded. 


I have no reason to doubt him, except for the anxiety monster eating away at my brain I mentioned earlier. What limited literature I have found seems to suggest this is correct, but in some circles it is a hotly debated topic with contradicting views. I was just wondering if someone could confirm this for me please. I would also be interested in understanding why this is the case to satisfy my own natural curiosity of all things!


Many thanks in advance
Parents
  • About eight years ago my daughter bought a house that had been rewired shortly before the sale by a Part P registered electrician. The plastic water supply had a foot long piece of copper pipe inserted after the stop tap into the plastic pipe work of the house, it had been re-plumbed in plastic as well. This had been very neatly bonded, or earthed depending on your definition of connecting a random bit of copper to the MET,  with 10mm G/Y!  I did find a few other oddities like missing blanks in the CU but otherwise it had been well installed. I did take a photo of the piece of copper pipe but cannot find it in the many thousands I have.
Reply
  • About eight years ago my daughter bought a house that had been rewired shortly before the sale by a Part P registered electrician. The plastic water supply had a foot long piece of copper pipe inserted after the stop tap into the plastic pipe work of the house, it had been re-plumbed in plastic as well. This had been very neatly bonded, or earthed depending on your definition of connecting a random bit of copper to the MET,  with 10mm G/Y!  I did find a few other oddities like missing blanks in the CU but otherwise it had been well installed. I did take a photo of the piece of copper pipe but cannot find it in the many thousands I have.
Children
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