martin224
Electrical
- Sep 25, 2012
- 3
I have a question that I imagine corrosion engineering experts will find trivial - but it's puzzling me.
I'm living in France and have just replaced my "chauffe eau" - a 200 litre hot water tank with built in 2.4kW electrical heater and thermostat.
The instructions say that the tank should be installed with an electrically insulating joint where the hot water outlet pipe is attached. I bought a pair of joints (they are only sold as pairs) and their instructions said that one should be installed on the cold inlet and one on the hot outlet. They are sold as prolonging the life of the tank. I have dutifully installed these joints. They are made of plated steel, with a tough plastic gasket preventing the two ends coming into contact.
I assumed that the function of the "dielectric joints", as they are called, is to prevent the steel tank being corroded by electrolysis resulting from a short-circuited steel-copper cell, the hard water in the system serving as the electrolyte.
However, for electrical safety, the hot and cold pipes, and the tank, are all electrically bonded to the house's ground connection. So there is a low resistance connection across the insulated joints. The steel-copper cell is short-circuited.
Please enlighten me. How can the insulated joints serve a useful function when there is a low resistance connection ensuring that both sides of each joint are at exactly the same voltage?
Martin
I'm living in France and have just replaced my "chauffe eau" - a 200 litre hot water tank with built in 2.4kW electrical heater and thermostat.
The instructions say that the tank should be installed with an electrically insulating joint where the hot water outlet pipe is attached. I bought a pair of joints (they are only sold as pairs) and their instructions said that one should be installed on the cold inlet and one on the hot outlet. They are sold as prolonging the life of the tank. I have dutifully installed these joints. They are made of plated steel, with a tough plastic gasket preventing the two ends coming into contact.
I assumed that the function of the "dielectric joints", as they are called, is to prevent the steel tank being corroded by electrolysis resulting from a short-circuited steel-copper cell, the hard water in the system serving as the electrolyte.
However, for electrical safety, the hot and cold pipes, and the tank, are all electrically bonded to the house's ground connection. So there is a low resistance connection across the insulated joints. The steel-copper cell is short-circuited.
Please enlighten me. How can the insulated joints serve a useful function when there is a low resistance connection ensuring that both sides of each joint are at exactly the same voltage?
Martin