I'm understanding but not the egc, ebj the ssbj the lsbj.
From what I understand, even though we ground equipment and receptacles etc., we are actually bonding them.
Grounding would be earthing right?
But even if we did call it grounding, the egc definition is "the conductive path that connect metal parts of equipment to the system neutral conductor, to the grounding electrode conductor, or both."
So even though these bonding jumpers and conductors are actually bonding jumpers and conductors, they should eventually or immediately connect a conductive path to the neutral or electrode conductor or both so shouldn't they be a egc?
I was reading and saw 2- MH's cartoon pics, for 250.102 (D) which shows equipment bonding jumpers (one is a picture of 3- bonding (or egc) entering 3 pipes and labeled "bonding jumpers" and one is one bonding jumper attached to 3- pipes via grounding bushings).
I enclosed a MH cartoon, not the one I see in a book that I'm referring to but something similar.
Not life threatening, just wondering.
Thank you.
From what I understand, even though we ground equipment and receptacles etc., we are actually bonding them.
Grounding would be earthing right?
But even if we did call it grounding, the egc definition is "the conductive path that connect metal parts of equipment to the system neutral conductor, to the grounding electrode conductor, or both."
So even though these bonding jumpers and conductors are actually bonding jumpers and conductors, they should eventually or immediately connect a conductive path to the neutral or electrode conductor or both so shouldn't they be a egc?
I was reading and saw 2- MH's cartoon pics, for 250.102 (D) which shows equipment bonding jumpers (one is a picture of 3- bonding (or egc) entering 3 pipes and labeled "bonding jumpers" and one is one bonding jumper attached to 3- pipes via grounding bushings).
I enclosed a MH cartoon, not the one I see in a book that I'm referring to but something similar.
Not life threatening, just wondering.
Thank you.