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Is this method of earthing a water pipe permissible?

A house has the main earth terminal block located next to the electricity supply cable in a cupboard in the living room. The water supply is a blue MDPE pipe located in the kitchen that transitions to a copper pipe about 2m before the stop tap.

About 1m away from the earth terminal block are a pair of copper central heating flow and return pipes. These same two pipes are located right next to the copper water supply pipe in the kitchen.

The easiest, and most economical on cable, method to earth the pipes is to connect the earth terminal block to the central heating pipes in the living room, then connect the central heating pipes to the water supply pipe in the kitchen.

Is this permissible, or must a long length of earth cable be installed under the floorboards connecting the earth terminal block to the water supply pipe?

Parents
  • However an  “insulated” sections of pipe breaking the electrical continuity on extraneous pipework entering a building is no longer permissible if there lead, steel or copper coming out of the ground into a building it needs a Main Protective Bonding conductor, rather than just a few millimetres of plastic pipe and/or fittings before reverting to metal.

  • I would be testing at 500 volts dc after temporary removal of the boiler cpc from the pipe work to the MET,this will prove whether its an extraneous-conductive-part or not . The value i use is 23 K ohms which would allow 10 ma . GN8 describes this process 

Reply
  • I would be testing at 500 volts dc after temporary removal of the boiler cpc from the pipe work to the MET,this will prove whether its an extraneous-conductive-part or not . The value i use is 23 K ohms which would allow 10 ma . GN8 describes this process 

Children
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