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

    In which case the short answer is probably that you don't need any bonding at all then. In general it's extraneous-conductive-parts  that need main bonding - i.e. parts that can introduce a potential (voltage) into the system that can differ from the installation's own Earth reference (i.e. the MET). So in normal buildings it's things like metallic water and gas pipes that bring "true Earth" potential in from outside (or fault voltages from other installations). Metalwork that's wholly inside the vehicle isn't going to be able to import a potential from anywhere. (If is was half in, half out, resting on the ground outside, it might be different).

    Occasionally you'll come across supplementary bonding that does include metalwork that wholly within an installation - but that's to establish another equipotential zone within a smaller area (e.g. a bathroom) - probably unlikely in this case (and again if the metalwork is wholly within that area, it's unlikely to be an extraneous-conductive-part as far as that location is concerned).

       - Andy.

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

    In which case the short answer is probably that you don't need any bonding at all then. In general it's extraneous-conductive-parts  that need main bonding - i.e. parts that can introduce a potential (voltage) into the system that can differ from the installation's own Earth reference (i.e. the MET). So in normal buildings it's things like metallic water and gas pipes that bring "true Earth" potential in from outside (or fault voltages from other installations). Metalwork that's wholly inside the vehicle isn't going to be able to import a potential from anywhere. (If is was half in, half out, resting on the ground outside, it might be different).

    Occasionally you'll come across supplementary bonding that does include metalwork that wholly within an installation - but that's to establish another equipotential zone within a smaller area (e.g. a bathroom) - probably unlikely in this case (and again if the metalwork is wholly within that area, it's unlikely to be an extraneous-conductive-part as far as that location is concerned).

       - Andy.

Children
  • If the rack contained telecoms or IT equipment with signal/data interconnections you might want to bond everything regardless to from a mesh bonding network - but that's more a matter of keeping various equipment's idea of Earth as similar as possible to reduce the risk of earth referenced data signals being corrupted - i.e. for functional rather than for electrical safety (protective) reasons.

       - Andy.