Discuss How would you fix water pipe in bathroom repaired at previous time using plastic connector? in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

it ensures the connecting parts are at equal potential and he terminates a fault?

Yes, sort of. Equipotential bonding ensures all extraneous parts are at the same potential. So what happens if the pipe was bonded, but now has a non conductive part inserted?

For your college answer, draw a diagram showing the position of the bonding clamp and also the position of the plastic coupling. You could show how the conductive path is broken.
 
Yes, sort of. Equipotential bonding ensures all extraneous parts are at the same potential. So what happens if the pipe was bonded, but now has a non conductive part inserted?

For your college answer, draw a diagram showing the position of the bonding clamp and also the position of the plastic coupling. You could show how the conductive path is broken.
thank you. it must be like trying to get blood from a stone! thanks for your patience. Will the pipe no longer conduct? and like you said an open circuit.
 
thank you. it must be like trying to get blood from a stone! thanks for your patience. Will the pipe no longer conduct? and like you said an open circuit.

Well, we're assuming it's a metal pipe. The question doesn't state that. But I think that's what it's getting at.

Yes, the conductive path is broken if a piece of plastic is inserted.

This can actually be a useful thing to do to avoid the need for equipotential bonding, but don't worry about that yet.
 
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thank you for your reply. I am a trainee electrician and the question is;

imagine you have discovered a water pipe in a bathroom that has been repaired at some previous time using a plastic connector.

explain comprehensively why this situation could be dangerous.
describe using sketches how you would remedy the situation.
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It can introduce various risks, including leakage, bursting, health hazards, fire hazards, reduced water flow, and increased maintenance requirements.
 
It can introduce various risks, including leakage, bursting, health hazards, fire hazards, reduced water flow, and increased maintenance requirements.

I think the key factor is that it can affect the equipotential bonding if a non conductive piece is introduced to a metal pipe.
 
It can introduce various risks, including leakage, bursting, health hazards, fire hazards, reduced water flow, and increased maintenance requirements.
Many plastic connectors are totally suitable for joining metal pipes from a plumbing point of view, and are less likely to leak than a traditional metal compression fitting under many circumstances
 
It can introduce various risks, including leakage, bursting, health hazards, fire hazards, reduced water flow, and increased maintenance requirements.

Could you also say that because the plastic connector has been fitted, the metal pipework after the fitting has no channel back to earth. So if an electrical fault was to occur past the point of the connector, that part of the pipe would become live and therefore a shock hazard?

I'm on the same question and I think I understand for the most part that if a plastic connector is used, the current stops there as its not a conductive material, and that you'd use clamps either side of the fitting (#14 i think, though would it be a humid environment and maybe use 15?) to reestablish the electrical connection.
 

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