BAS, I am impressed. The seals are still intact! 
I think that's what "bonding" means to many flavours of mechanical engineer and technicians etc., and I'm sure that the average member of the public's understanding of "bonding" is far closer to that than to the technical sense in which it is used in relation to electrical installations. Ask Joe public if his water supply pipes are bonded, and he's quite likely to answer along the lines of "No, it's all done with compression joints"![I think I've realised what you mean by this - you mean the connection to the sheath needs to be properly made.
That's not what "bonding" means.
I would want to undertake an examination before being too sure; it's easy to hide the cut for the purpose opf a photo-shootBAS, I am impressed. The seals are still intact!![]()
BAS, I am impressed. The seals are still intact!![]()
If he had a standby generator installed, with a changeover switch, and the generator neutral connected to a copper coated steel rod in the ground, what would the rod be?
I think some of this silliness of terminology can perhaps be helped by realising that an earthing conductor coming from an earth rod very much is (per BS7671 definition), and always is, an extraneous-conductive-part when it enters the premises and so, like any other e-c-p, must be connected (bonded?Would it be an extraneous conductive part when the DNO's supply is in use, and an earth rod when the generator is in use?If he had a standby generator installed, with a changeover switch, and the generator neutral connected to a copper coated steel rod in the ground, what would the rod be?
Hmmm. These 'demarcations' are undoubtedly very frustrating to customers - so I suppose one should be thankful that there was not also a meter involved in this mixThe biggest problem is the poor customer stuck in the middle! ... We had one today, a customer rang in after an electrician had visited site, reporting no means of earthing.
Yep he should have converted it to TT.
One of our guys attended and we decided the network was PME, we decided to fit this and informed that customer that there was an earth now available. Customer was a bit unhappy when we refused to check the bonding and connect to the MET, but that they had to get their own electrical contractor in.
Yes, but is that not the problem? The "do not, and cannot" presumably relates to rules, which could be changed. You say that there has to be a line someone - but does there? Does there have to be a rigid 'line' - what about 'overlap'? We've discussed before (no need to repeat that discussion) the view of some that electricians should be trained and 'authorised' to pull most cutout fuses (and to recognise those they shoudn't touch). The corollary would be for DNO staff to be trained and authorised to do some types of work on the 'front end' and earthing/bonding of 'private' installations, if it formed a logical part of other work they were doing.At the end of the day there has to be a line somewhere .... We do not, cannot work on private wiring
Sure, but that just one of the ('man-made') 'rules' I was talking about - that doesn't necessarily have to remain unchanged. As you realise, I'm not talking about what can/does happen in the present 'system' - I'm talking about what might be a better system.As a DNO we are not allowed by law to operate as an electrical contractor!
I haven't suggested anything about who should pay (even though, ultimately, it obviously has to be the customer, however indirectly). That's something that would have to be worked out. If worked out 'properly and fairly' it ought to be cheaper for the customer to pay the DNO (wo)man who is already on site than having to call out another person.So are you suggesting DNOs should be installing bonding for free, that would start a good scam by customers getting us to do it.
Easiest for you, perhaps, but clearly not efficient as far as the customer (or the true overall cost, owever nadministered) is concerned.The easiest would be to say "you don't have an earth, we are not obliged to provide one, goodbye"
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