brother
Senior Member
its been a while since ive wired some old houses. I thought you had to use a special type of bonding clamp for when you going from Galvenized pipe to copper when bonding them together with a copper wire when you have a 'dielectric' fitting between the 2. this pipe (galvenized) is 5ft with in the building and yes you do bond at the panel too for it to be a GEC.
Heard a guy say that this would just defeat the purpose of the dielectric fitting to prevent the dissimilar metals from corrosion. I said well you still have to bond it anyways, either a copper wire to the panel from the galvenized pipe on the one side of the dielectric fittings and then bond the new copper water pipe (ie from the water heater) to the panel. all that copper water pipe has to be bonded, so either way you still have to bond.
But tell me what fitting would you use to jumper over dielectric fitting from the copper to galvy water pipe that would prevent corrosion if you wanted to do it this way????
Heard a guy say that this would just defeat the purpose of the dielectric fitting to prevent the dissimilar metals from corrosion. I said well you still have to bond it anyways, either a copper wire to the panel from the galvenized pipe on the one side of the dielectric fittings and then bond the new copper water pipe (ie from the water heater) to the panel. all that copper water pipe has to be bonded, so either way you still have to bond.
But tell me what fitting would you use to jumper over dielectric fitting from the copper to galvy water pipe that would prevent corrosion if you wanted to do it this way????