Bonding of Gas Appliances

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aaronm

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DFW Texas
With the recent uptick in lawsuits against inspectors for CSST installations not being bonded as per the manufacturer's installation instructions, et al., a few inspectors in Texas have now begun, in my opinion mistakenly, calling out bonding in all manner of places. Specifically, a couple are disseminating (mis)information regarding the need and requirement to install bonding jumpers across flexible gas appliance connectors at water heaters and furnaces. I am not talking about CSST here, just the usual gas appliance connectors. Am I wrong in assuming that there is no specific NEC requirement for this? Or are the other guys suffering from Colorado-inspired delusions?:D

Thanks,

aaron
 
With the recent uptick in lawsuits against inspectors for CSST installations not being bonded as per the manufacturer's installation instructions, et al., a few inspectors in Texas have now begun, in my opinion mistakenly, calling out bonding in all manner of places. Specifically, a couple are disseminating (mis)information regarding the need and requirement to install bonding jumpers across flexible gas appliance connectors at water heaters and furnaces. I am not talking about CSST here, just the usual gas appliance connectors. Am I wrong in assuming that there is no specific NEC requirement for this? Or are the other guys suffering from Colorado-inspired delusions?:D

Thanks,

aaron

It is my interpretation that the nec requires no additional bonding for gas appliances or piping systems. It clearly states that the egc serving the appliance does the bonding.
 
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