Damocles said:
Extraneous means outside? well ok, I think it was a made-up word,
The dictionary definition of extraneous is
of external origin, foreign to or no belonging to.
The definition of an extraneous-conductive-part in the wiring regs is
‘Extraneous-conductive-part. A conductive part liable to introduce a potential, generally earth potential, and not forming part of the electrical installation.’
but the question must be whether the connection is extraneous to the bathroom, not whether it is extraneous to the house.
No - the question is can it introduce a potential.
If I can ignore a metal pipe running into the bathroom then surely I can ignore one running into the house. Which I can't.
But we're talking here about a metal pipe which at some point is attached to a plastic pipe, and so is electrically insulated from the general mass of the earth.
If it is safe to assume that all metalwork within the house has been 'neutralised' by the main bonding process, then what is the point of bathroom bonding at all?
It's precisely because it is not safe to regard all the pipes as having been "neutralised that we have supplementary equipotential bonding.
Supplementary because it supplements the main bonding, and equipotential because its purpose is to ensure that all the extraneous-conductive-parts in the bathroom are at the same potential. What you don't want is poor connections somewhere resulting in a PD between the chrome plated shaver socket faceplate which has just become live and the towel rail, because if
you then complete the circuit, current will flow through
you, and current flowing through the human body is a Bad Thing™. So everything is connected together, and to the cpc of all circuits supplying equipment in the bathroom.
However, the safest environment is one which is earth free. With no possibility of being connected to earth, you could grab hold of a live wire in absolute safety.
But I agree with you about the plastic. Water is an insulator. Remember that folks.
I do remember that, and if you do also I'm puzzled at your insistence on bonding in this situation..
IEE research says a 15mm pipe full of water typically has resitance 20-100 k ohm per metre. Depending on impurities.
So 40 - 200kohm for a 2m run, i.e. at 230V the possibility of a 1.15 - 5.75mA current, marginally less considering the resistance of the human body as well. (Apologies, BTW, should have written "<6mA" above...)