Bonding of a bolted-together equipment rack located in a vehicle

I have a custom built stainless steel equipment rack that is made up of many individual sections of stainless steel angle that are bolted together to form the complete rack. The stainless steel parts will not have any paint or finish applied. 

The equipment rack will be mounted in a vehicle with the bottom sections of the rack bolted to the metal floor of the vehicle. 

The equipment rack will have 12 Volt and 28 Volt equipment mounted on it.

My question.....

- Does a single wire connection from the vehicle's Main Earth Terminal (MET) to the equipment rack meet the protective bonding requirements?

I am hoping that I do not need to have a separate wire from the MET to each individual piece of steel angle, or a 'strap' linking the bolted-joints.


Parents
  • The equipment rack will have 12 Volt and 28 Volt equipment mounted on it.

    What's this "bonding" there to achieve? Is it the "earth"/chassis return for the d.c. system or meant to be part of some protective measures? or for EMI reasons?

       - Andy.

Reply
  • The equipment rack will have 12 Volt and 28 Volt equipment mounted on it.

    What's this "bonding" there to achieve? Is it the "earth"/chassis return for the d.c. system or meant to be part of some protective measures? or for EMI reasons?

       - Andy.

Children
  • I can't see any bonding is needed In the usual sense of the word,we only bond to keep voltages from being unequal between simultaneously accessible conductive parts. As you using extra low voltage this is most likely not required,unless I'm missing something or it's for other reasons as stated above

  • Hi  Andy,

    Primarily, I'm including the bonding to ensure compliance to the "protective equipotential bonding" requirements. 

    The bonding wire (or any part of the metal equipment rack) is not intended to carry DC 'return' current (all DC equipment have dedicated positive and negative cables)

    Steve 

  • Hi,

    Apologies, I did not make it clear in my original post that the vehicle installation DOES include 240 Vac equipment. However, this equipment is not on the rack that I'm referring to, and there are no AC cables on the rack either.

    Steve