Can a bond bushing replace an EGC in an electrical update?

Certainly in a steel frame building there are hundreds of parallel paths with the EGC so your point is valid. In 40 years in the trade I have seen an evolution in the thinking about this.

When I started in the 80's you never saw a green wire in any raceway. Even with 3/4" FMC we never installed a wire type EGC (old NYC electrical code). Then in the late 90's-2010's we were pulling in EGC's and IG's everywhere, often a separate EGC for every branch circuit even in a common raceway. Fast forward to 2015 and beyond we stopped pulling them in because someone started to realize (per electro's point) that they were a waste of money in steel framed construction or where you had large racks of conduits all connected together every 6' with a piece of strut. The last big high rise building I worked in they had an odd idea where they specified that only raceways for emergency circuits got a wire type EGC.
Yes it really is quite fascinating how all this has evolved.
 
FWIW, I always specify a wire EGC. Every joint/connection in a conduit run is a potential point of failure.
Here they started specifying green wire after the MGM grand fire in Nevada circa 1980, when it was understood from the forensics the fire was caused by a 3/4 metal flex that had come loose or was never installed properly that caused a breaker to fail to trip properly.
I do agree the green wire can be omitted in the case of the OP (perhaps test the raceway) and with large pipe racks, but some redundancy is good.
 
I do agree the green wire can be omitted in the case of the OP (perhaps test the raceway) and with large pipe racks, but some redundancy is good.
Yeah sometimes even I will admit its a good idea. Like maybe on roof tops with smaller diameter and/or a small quantity of EMT where you are out in the elements and they are just sitting on dura blocks getting kicked around.....But cult members think every single installation needs a wire or everyone in a half mile radius will die a horrlbe grusome fiery death.
 
While I normally do not use a wire EGC in metal unless required, I did when I ran a 30a, 120/240v feeder to an outbuilding in RGS due to rocky conditions. I figured that the conduit will slowly disappear.
 
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