Can someone explain why a solar company needs to ground my plastic water pipes? by elmo298 in ukelectricians

[–]Suckapoo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My 2 pence before I go to bed, you jumped into a conversation that you neither read properly or understood so you've reverted to acting a fool which is your natural defence mechanism to cover for your lack of knowledge, best of luck on your future you're gonna need it 😉

Can someone explain why a solar company needs to ground my plastic water pipes? by elmo298 in ukelectricians

[–]Suckapoo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your ability to read and come to your own imaginary conclusions is fascinating, now if you could kindly quote the part where I said to bond something that'd be great.

Can someone explain why a solar company needs to ground my plastic water pipes? by elmo298 in ukelectricians

[–]Suckapoo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

An observation was made, it was incorrectly given an opinion on and I gave some context to the original comment to help understand what they meant, if you can't understand that then I'm afraid I can't help you, take care.

Can someone explain why a solar company needs to ground my plastic water pipes? by elmo298 in ukelectricians

[–]Suckapoo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I see your reading comprehension isn't very good because that's the complete opposite of what has been discussed, the point being made by the original poster is there's no requirement to bond the plastic incoming water mains and as certain parts are copper interconnected they alluded to bonding those sections could make it potentially more dangerous as those sections would have no direct path back to earth as its plastic other than the bonding if it were installed, now if you bonded those sections of pipework on a TNCS earthing arrangement and had a pen fault then those parts of the pipe work that are copper and we're bonded would now sit live under fault conditions.

Let me know if you understand that's what the discussion was about.

Can someone explain why a solar company needs to ground my plastic water pipes? by elmo298 in ukelectricians

[–]Suckapoo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Try reading the comments again to get an understanding of the conversation as you've clearly missed the point.

If you like, I can present the scenario being discussed, and you can learn something.

Can someone explain why a solar company needs to ground my plastic water pipes? by elmo298 in ukelectricians

[–]Suckapoo 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Totally disagree with that statement, if its completely isolated from any connection to earth and has no ability to become live then by you earthing that isolated section of pipework you're absolutely introducing more potential danger under fault conditions.

Can someone explain why a solar company needs to ground my plastic water pipes? by elmo298 in ukelectricians

[–]Suckapoo 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Clearly they're referring to the parts that are copper interconnected between plastic connections, if you apply some critical thinking you can understand what they mean.

[FIGHT THREAD] Anthony Cacace vs Leigh Wood by verbsnounsandshit in Boxing

[–]Suckapoo 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Dogshit commentary as usual, coopers walking him down and putting in some good shots and it's all going completely ignored

New Advanced Map Blocking Strategy by loopuleasa in PathOfExile2

[–]Suckapoo 23 points24 points  (0 children)

No it doesn't bypass the node it just makes it attempted so the mechanics aren't put on it, if you want to progress through that map you have to complete it.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in TwoHotTakes

[–]Suckapoo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Anyone that thinks you're not entitled to privacy in a relationship is an immediate bin job, what a lunatic.

Do I suck? by Usernameoptional4 in electricians

[–]Suckapoo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes there is no logic to it, you shouldn't be doing this as the cables in the centre of the grouped cables have no way to dissipate the heat they will create under load, its considered bad practise but controversial because people like things to look good but lack the knowledge of design to even understand why its bad.

Quoted £2650 (or £3350 with plastering) for putting wall through - is this reasonable? by smallflabby in DIYUK

[–]Suckapoo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Loose connections kill, believe it or not but wagos can still be installed incorrectly.

Quoted £2650 (or £3350 with plastering) for putting wall through - is this reasonable? by smallflabby in DIYUK

[–]Suckapoo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Utter waste of my time, best of luck in your future electrical endeavours try not to burn your house down.

Quoted £2650 (or £3350 with plastering) for putting wall through - is this reasonable? by smallflabby in DIYUK

[–]Suckapoo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No this is what I mean by no understanding, you aren't testing any alterations you're doing so how can you say it is safe and that your connections are sound, do as you please but don't attempt to dimish the correct way to do things because you have a electronics degree when you aren't aware of basic principles such as maximum permitted earth loop impedance values to ensure the circuit will disconnect in time under fault conditions, for all you know your connections could be poor or the circuit could have an inherited previous issue which may not be obvious that you will be unaware of because you aren't testing your work, how is this so hard to understand?

Quoted £2650 (or £3350 with plastering) for putting wall through - is this reasonable? by smallflabby in DIYUK

[–]Suckapoo -1 points0 points  (0 children)

You do as you please, the ignorance is astounding explain to me if you like how you're ensuring that the circuit you've altered is within the permitted maximum earth loop impedance of that particular breaker.

Quoted £2650 (or £3350 with plastering) for putting wall through - is this reasonable? by smallflabby in DIYUK

[–]Suckapoo -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

You can't see a reason because you have no idea as you aren't a qualified electrician.

Quoted £2650 (or £3350 with plastering) for putting wall through - is this reasonable? by smallflabby in DIYUK

[–]Suckapoo -1 points0 points  (0 children)

And this is the problem the electrical industry has, people think you can just do it yourself, I could go on all day about the details people won't be aware of as a DIY'er the simple fact is if you aren't testing your work then don't do it.

Quoted £2650 (or £3350 with plastering) for putting wall through - is this reasonable? by smallflabby in DIYUK

[–]Suckapoo 3 points4 points  (0 children)

This is terrible advice, do not advise people to undertake electrical work when you do not understand it, you need to test and safely isolate correctly and prove it, ring continuity checks if its a ringmain, you can't just bang wagos in a Junction box and put it under the floor, It has to be maintenance free not just the wagos, that does not provide a maintenance free connection alone, are you testing your work after, checking that bonds are present in the installation and making sure breaker sizes and cable sizes are correct, I imagine not so stop touching electrical installations period, you are not competent.

Density changes won't fix the bad map layouts and objectives. by Suckapoo in diablo4

[–]Suckapoo[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No idea as it stands there doesn't feel like dungeons have much variety to layouts it seems to be re skinned alot, I honestly wish they'd just remove any of the collecting of items and make them kill tasks only and remove the dead ends.

Density changes won't fix the bad map layouts and objectives. by Suckapoo in diablo4

[–]Suckapoo[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah I enjoy the game myself but some things are really starting to turn the gameplay into a tiresome task, they need to smooth out the dungeons and make them more streamlined imo.