"Sparks seemed to get carried away with bonding"
I know, hundreds of thousands of sparks, wiring millions of properties, what ever we're they thinking of?
Oh yes, wiring to the "IEE regulations"!!!
AJJewsbury:
But what about situations like my old Grandmother's house. ... If you consider only the protective devices of the bathroom sockets ...
Sparkingchip:
The wet and nearly naked, except for the swimming costume, bit really applies to items such as the stainless steel post lights around the hot tub in the garden, rather than equipment and fittings inside of the house.
But it has to be remembered that TNCS earthing is not acceptable in all installations and properties and ultimately it is the installation electrician who has to decide what the earthing system will be, just because the DNO have supplied an earth terminal doesn’t mean that it should be used.
Sparkingchip:
In some instances the regs accept 70 volts rather than 50 volts as the upper limit for touch voltage, so that isn’t set in stone.
However, when naked, barefoot and wet, you also have to consider the “phantom voltage” that there may be on metal pipework and taps due to the ten or so volts that there may be due to the earth being taken from the DNO neutral which is after all a live conductor.
One of the people most likely to notice a tingling feeling due to phantom voltage is the window cleaner in soggy training shoes washing the window panes in the steel Crittal window frames that the electrician has carefully connected supplementary equipotential potential bonding conductors to, with the window cleaner being outside of the equipotential zone standing in the garden.
Andy Betteridge
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