Earth bonding is this redundant?
Earth bonding is this redundant?
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MajorMantra

Original Poster:

1,656 posts

134 months

Wednesday 28th January
quotequote all
I'm in the process of renovating my kitchen and the existing pipework is joined by earth wires.

This is the supply:



That incoming pipe appears to be some of plastic, I'm assuming MDPE or HDPE.

Am I right in saying that any earth bonding is now completely redundant and should be removed?

The old stainless sink was earthed for example and I want to be sure that the new one doesn't need it too.

bangerhoarder

725 posts

90 months

Wednesday 28th January
quotequote all
AFAIK, you have a copper pipe and fittings there so the bonding isn't redundant. If something touches that pipe making it go live, you have protection. It can be isolated from ground, plastic both ends, but it's still a conductor.

MajorMantra

Original Poster:

1,656 posts

134 months

Wednesday 28th January
quotequote all
bangerhoarder said:
AFAIK, you have a copper pipe and fittings there so the bonding isn't redundant. If something touches that pipe making it go live, you have protection. It can be isolated from ground, plastic both ends, but it's still a conductor.
As far as I can tell there is no actual connection to earth though. My neighbour in the terrace has an earth driven into the ground by her front door, but we don't.

markiii

4,193 posts

216 months

Wednesday 28th January
quotequote all
is there no incoming earth at your fusebox?

MajorMantra

Original Poster:

1,656 posts

134 months

Wednesday 28th January
quotequote all
markiii said:
is there no incoming earth at your fusebox?
There's an earth from meter box to consumer unit. So is it likely the visible earth at the supply pipe runs back to the consumer unit too?

markiii

4,193 posts

216 months

Wednesday 28th January
quotequote all
thats how i would have expected it

mine has an earth block near the consumer unit where the pipe bonding connects back to which in turn i connects to teh incomer


Jakg

3,936 posts

190 months

Wednesday 28th January
quotequote all
(not an electrician)

My understanding is that it used to be required, but now it's not.

See https://electrical.theiet.org/wiring-matters/years...

Buzz84

1,448 posts

171 months

Wednesday 28th January
quotequote all
Is there a reason you need to remove it? is it causing any issues?

If not leave it be, even if its not required having extra protection has never been a bad thing.

Sheepshanks

39,112 posts

141 months

Wednesday 28th January
quotequote all
When we recently had smart meters fitted, they left a card pointing out there was no earth bonding at the gas meter even though the gas supply pipe is obviously plastic.

Apparently they leave these cards regardless of the pipe if they can't see bonding.

Internally, the gas pipework is bonded. I've seen discussions that it doesn't need to be, or in fact it might even be bad to do it, but it's almost certainly going to be earthed anyway via various appliance connections.

JoshSm

3,305 posts

59 months

Wednesday 28th January
quotequote all
Here's something from somewhere that had a water supply incoming on MDPE pipe.

Testing the electrical earth showed it was floating above physical ground even with the incoming supply isolated.

Turned out the volts were coming from the water main due to an external fault and pulling up the PME via the bonding. Removing the bond to the pipework would have fixed the earth but wouldn't have much helped the tingle from using a tap.

I tend to err to the side of having bonding on pipework even if not strictly needed.

Techno9000

216 posts

98 months

Wednesday 28th January
quotequote all
It’s more that the internal pipe work, both gas and water, is bonded to the earth.
This is usually achieved just house side of the gas meter and water stop cock.

Bond is run back to the wherever the electricity earth point is.

The intent is that if any internal pipework comes into contact with an electrical supply it will blow a fuse / trip a breaker, rather than become ‘live’ awaiting someone to touch the pipework…

V8 Stang

4,482 posts

205 months

Wednesday 28th January
quotequote all
Only required if the copper is coming out of the ground. Not required if plastic.
To keep the pipework at the same potential.


Most seem to bond the copper anyway, and no harm doing so.

MajorMantra

Original Poster:

1,656 posts

134 months

Wednesday 28th January
quotequote all
Thanks all!