He really ought to search out Mr Cockburn's œuvre... 
I'm glad that you agree with me, but I'm not sure that the general situation is as quite as simple as you seem to imply.It is, which is why it should not be done - the bath is not an exposed-conductive-part.... That's surely earthing, not bonding?
No it doesn't. Read the definition.In a functional sense, if one puts a hairdryer (or whatever) inside a metal bath, that bath does become an exposed-c-p.
Not necessarily - if you had two metal baths and you connected them together you would have bonded them, but not earthed them.Wrongly applied bonding (when NOT required) is indeed earthing.
You physically can but you should not and it will achieve nothing.Yes, you can bond two things together without earth being involved in any way.
If they are not already earthed in any way then they will not require bonding.
I know.If they are not already earthed in any way then they will not require bonding.
Indeed - and I, too, didn't understand why anyone would say that - although you probably perpetuated the confusion by replying that the purpose was "to equalise potentials".If you are correct, then they would not be told "It's not earthing, it's bonding", would they?
Fair enough.I know.If they are not already earthed in any way then they will not require bonding.
Which is why if you did it it would be wrongly applied but it would not be earthing.
It is, which is why it should not be done - the bath is not an exposed-conductive-part.
I wouldn't really know where to find a definition of "exposed-c-p in a functional sense"No it doesn't. Read the definition.In a functional sense, if one puts a hairdryer (or whatever) inside a metal bath, that bath does become an exposed-c-p.
That would make it an extraneous-c-p, which would require bonding, not earthing.It IS an exposed-conductive-part when the bath's waste pipe is metal and the other end of the waste pipe is connected to a metal stack pipe that goes under ground.
If it was bonding, that would be the purpose and reason.Indeed - and I, too, didn't understand why anyone would say that - although you probably perpetuated the confusion by replying that the purpose was "to equalise potentials".If you are correct, then they would not be told "It's not earthing, it's bonding", would they?
It surely is more prudent, sensible and easy to ensure a hair-drier is NOT dropped into a bath while you or someone else is sat in it.Whenever, I see/hear the 'bath earthing debate', I think of Bernard and his viewpoint, and his reason for wanting to 'connect the bath to something' is, as I understand it, in the name of earthing (to facilitate operation of a protective device). Of course, a 'side effect' of that 'earthing' would be to minimise pds between the bath and other earthed items in the room ('bonding') if a protective device did not operate (or until it operated) - but, if I understand correctly (which maybe I don't), that is not Bernard's primary reason for wanting to connect the bath to earth.
Of course, but given the existence of extension leads, I'm not sure how you would go about "ensuring" that. What is this "easy" to which you refer?It surely is more prudent, sensible and easy to ensure a hair-drier is NOT dropped into a bath while you or someone else is sat in it.
Yes, but that's Utopia. If people could be guaranteed never to do stupid things, a good few of the things we do in electrical installations in the name of 'safety' probably wouldn't be necessary. Turn the clock back 50-60 years and we didn't bother about many of those 'safety issues', and hence relied a lot more on people not being stupid ... but times (and attitudes to risk) change!It's easy because people don't have to do it when the bath is full of water and people. People must be responsible for their actions when the correctly installed electrical installation does not cater for their stupidity.
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