c2500
Senior Member
- Location
- South Carolina
Recently, I did a 200amp service upgrade. Placed a CH 200amp 8 circuit/meter combo on the exterior. It then fed to a subpanel in the basement. The house had gas already, and I bonded the gas line where it was convenient, which coincidentily was about as far from the gas meter as you could get. The job was inspected and passed. The bond was done with #4 bare stranded.
Then the contractor added a section of yellow gas tract pipe to the stove off the existing black pipe system. When the gas guy came to hook it up he blew a gasket. First, because the add on was not inspected. Second, because the bond was in the wrong place. When the builder called me, I said the tech from the gas company was full of it, since I did pass the city inspection. He finally talked to the mechanical inspector, who said while technically my install was correct, the gas company now wants the bond at their meter due to lawsuits fom the tract pipe splitting open when subject to lightening strikes.
Has anyone else been subject to this? When they gas company came back, they hooked everything up without a change to the bond point (different tech, and it was a week day as opposed to a Saturday afternoon.).
Am I wrong in thinking that if lightening strikes the gas line, no matter where the bond is, the whole system would be energized until the strike disipates?
c2500
Then the contractor added a section of yellow gas tract pipe to the stove off the existing black pipe system. When the gas guy came to hook it up he blew a gasket. First, because the add on was not inspected. Second, because the bond was in the wrong place. When the builder called me, I said the tech from the gas company was full of it, since I did pass the city inspection. He finally talked to the mechanical inspector, who said while technically my install was correct, the gas company now wants the bond at their meter due to lawsuits fom the tract pipe splitting open when subject to lightening strikes.
Has anyone else been subject to this? When they gas company came back, they hooked everything up without a change to the bond point (different tech, and it was a week day as opposed to a Saturday afternoon.).
Am I wrong in thinking that if lightening strikes the gas line, no matter where the bond is, the whole system would be energized until the strike disipates?
c2500