I wasn't aware that it is no longer called the equipotential zone. The fact that you used the expression "what we used to call" indicates that there is no description for it but it must still exist.
I think it's just an admission that bonding doesn't create equipotentiallity - the laws of physics get in the way as bonding conductors don't have negligible impedance and the voltage difference along a c.p.c. during an earth fault (giving the potential difference between an exposed-conductive-part and extraneous-conductive-parts can be very significant.
- Andy.
I wasn't aware that it is no longer called the equipotential zone. The fact that you used the expression "what we used to call" indicates that there is no description for it but it must still exist.
I think it's just an admission that bonding doesn't create equipotentiallity - the laws of physics get in the way as bonding conductors don't have negligible impedance and the voltage difference along a c.p.c. during an earth fault (giving the potential difference between an exposed-conductive-part and extraneous-conductive-parts can be very significant.
- Andy.
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