AJJewsbury:One of my concerns about using lead is its low melting point, perhaps when carrying large fault currents. Domestic lead covered cables of old were perhaps fused at 5, 15 or even 30 Amps so fault currents were relatively small. With lead pipes that may carry large diverted neutral currents the lead may melt or or best become soft, so fitting a B.S. 951 earth clamp to a lead gas pipe could be dangerous. I would never do so. Lead melts at about 300 degrees C and copper at over 1,000 degrees C.
Are you really suggesting that if you worked on an installation where all the gas pipework was all lead, you'd leave it unbonded?
- Andy.
I don't think that an all lead gas pipe system in a house would comply with modern gas regs. these days Andy.
What I said was that I would not fit a B.S. 951 earthing clamp onto a lead gas pipe. Nothing more nor less.
Z.
AJJewsbury:One of my concerns about using lead is its low melting point, perhaps when carrying large fault currents. Domestic lead covered cables of old were perhaps fused at 5, 15 or even 30 Amps so fault currents were relatively small. With lead pipes that may carry large diverted neutral currents the lead may melt or or best become soft, so fitting a B.S. 951 earth clamp to a lead gas pipe could be dangerous. I would never do so. Lead melts at about 300 degrees C and copper at over 1,000 degrees C.
Are you really suggesting that if you worked on an installation where all the gas pipework was all lead, you'd leave it unbonded?
- Andy.
I don't think that an all lead gas pipe system in a house would comply with modern gas regs. these days Andy.
What I said was that I would not fit a B.S. 951 earthing clamp onto a lead gas pipe. Nothing more nor less.
Z.
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