May I ask you?
First I'd like to thank you all for sharing all of this with me. I started frequenting here a couple a months ago after just going out and wiring and letting the "tech" aspect of this fall by the wayside.
Let me ask you.............. What if this detached garage had no water, but it did have a gas pipe run to it?
From what I see the code says it must be bonded.......yet with the ceu I went to, it was mentioned that it is grounded thru the electric cord from the oven, or dryer, or thru a boiler, and the instructor said
in his opinion the gas pipe should not be grounded/bonded.........and if the inspector wanted it to be (which I guess he should cause it's in the good book), you should have him sign off on it.
Now.........this detached garage........lets say it has no water but it does have a gas line...............if there's nothing hooked up to it should it be bonded? If it's going to have an appliance that requires electricity,
I guess the same thought as above would apply and maybe you would not or should not bond it. I'm not sure of gas devices out there that wouldn't need electricity, but what if it used a thermopile, or you lit it by hand?
Again, just wondering, and thank you for getting my gray matter working.
By the way, what is your take on the conductors feeding the detached garage? Treated as part of a service for dwelling or not.
Thanks again!
Rich
Bonding to a gas line scares me to death with no water line present. Without the water line, seems the gas line might become the ground path for a fault current. I worked on a service with old splices overhead, tape long since weathered off & many bare spots. Wind blew a hot into the neutral. Popped a bit and a literal "ring of fire" traveled down the ground wire to the ground rod and set fire to the grass around it. If the gas line became the ground path, would such an arc not ignite the gas within?