This is virtually identical to the discussion we had recently about an outhouse which contained a metal waterpipe which was in continuity (via the pipe) with bonded pipework in the house.You can, as I said (meant) use pipes as supplementary bonds. However, it's difficult to see how it would be physically possible to use a pipe for main bonding. You wrote -Did you mean main bonding?The lead pipe to the out house may be suitable to be used AS a protective bonding conductor...
I argued at the time that one could probably regard the pipe as both an extraneous-conductive part (as far as the outhouse was concerned) and as (its own) 'main bonding conductor' (given that it represented a part of a path all the way back to the house's MET, all of which had at least the required CSA for a main bonding conductor). I argued that the only situation in which it would fail to fulfill that function as a 'main bonding conductor' would be that which would arise if the pipe were cut or interrupted - but that, if that ever happened, there would no longer be an extraneous-c-p which required bonding!
Electrically-speaking, that argument seems (to me!) to be pretty sound. Do you agree, but do you nevertheless think that it's an unacceptable argument/practice as far as the regs are concerned?
Kind Regards, John
