Earthing & Bonding in Enfield
40 qualified electricians available for earthing & bonding in Enfield, London. Upfront pricing, book online.
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40 electricians for earthing & bonding in Enfield
24emergency Electrician Ltd
Enfield, N13 5SW
3 J'S Electrical Ltd
Enfield, EN3 7XU
Abbotts Mechanical and Electrical Limited
Enfield, EN2 0LT
AET Electrical Service Ltd
Enfield, N9 9EL
Armonantis Konta
Enfield, N13 4PP
B&C Electrics
Enfield, EN2 8LY
BES Electrical Services Ltd
Enfield, N9 7HB
Briam Electrical Contractors Ltd
Enfield, N9 8DH
BS Electrical
Enfield, EN4 9LT
Conduct Electrical Ltd
Enfield, EN1 3GN
D P M Electrical
Enfield, EN2 0BG
Direct Electrical Contractors (London) Ltd
Enfield, EN1 3LQ
DMP O'Connell
Enfield, EN1 3JS
ECO Electrical (TA Take Charge ECO Ltd)
Enfield, EN1 1EE
Elex UK Ltd
Enfield, N13 5PA
Era Electrical
Enfield, EN1 1JB
ERSAT Ltd
Enfield, EN3 6AG
Essex & Herts Electrical Services Ltd
Enfield, EN3 4PS
Friern Electrical Services Ltd
Enfield, EN2 8AS
George K Electrical Ltd
Enfield, EN1 2DA
About earthing & bonding in Enfield
Earthing and bonding are fundamental safety measures in every electrical installation. The earthing system provides a path for fault current to flow safely to earth, causing protective devices (fuses, MCBs, RCDs) to disconnect the supply. Bonding connects all metallic services (gas, water, oil pipes) to the earthing system, preventing dangerous voltage differences between them. An earthing and bonding upgrade brings these systems up to the current BS 7671 standard — replacing undersized conductors, adding missing bonds, and ensuring the earth fault loop impedance is low enough for protective devices to operate within the required time.
Inadequate earthing and bonding is one of the most common defects found on EICRs. Without proper earthing, a fault on an appliance or circuit may not trip the protective device, leaving the metalwork live and creating a serious shock hazard. Without bonding, metallic pipes can carry dangerous voltages — particularly in bathrooms where the risk of electric shock is highest. If your EICR has flagged earthing or bonding deficiencies (C1 or C2 codes), this work is essential for safety. It is also required as part of consumer unit upgrades, rewires, and new circuit installations.
What's included
- Assessment of existing earthing arrangement (TN-S, TN-C-S, or TT)
- Installation or upgrade of main earthing conductor (typically 16mm²)
- Main protective bonding to gas, water, and oil services (10mm²)
- Supplementary bonding in bathrooms and kitchens where required (4mm²)
- BS 951 bonding clamps and warning labels at all connections
- Earth rod installation for TT systems (where applicable)
- Earth fault loop impedance testing on all circuits
- Bonding continuity verification
- Electrical Installation Certificate or Minor Works Certificate
Typical cost
Earthing & Bonding in Enfield typically costs £150–£500 per property. Every job is different — describe what you need and a qualified electrician will quote you directly.
Regulations & standards
- BS 7671:2018+A2:2022 — Chapter 54 (Earthing Arrangements and Protective Conductors): Specifies the requirements for earthing arrangements, main earthing terminals, earthing conductors, protective bonding conductors, and earth electrodes. Defines the minimum conductor sizes and connection methods.
- BS 7671:2018+A2:2022 — Regulation 411 (Automatic Disconnection of Supply): Requires that the earthing system provides a sufficiently low impedance path for fault current to flow, enabling protective devices to disconnect the supply within 0.4 seconds (for socket circuits) or 5 seconds (for fixed equipment circuits).
- Part P of the Building Regulations: Earthing and bonding work that involves the main earthing terminal or is carried out as part of a consumer unit upgrade or new circuit installation is notifiable. Standalone bonding upgrades may be covered by a Minor Works Certificate.
- Electricity Safety, Quality and Continuity Regulations 2002 (ESQCR): Governs the DNO's responsibility to provide an earthing facility (where available) and the requirements for connection at the supply intake. Relevant when the earthing arrangement involves the DNO's infrastructure.
Earthing & Bonding FAQs
What is the difference between earthing and bonding?
Earthing provides a safe path for fault current to flow to earth, causing the circuit breaker or fuse to trip. Bonding connects all metallic services (gas, water, oil pipes) to the same earthing point, so there cannot be a dangerous voltage difference between them. Both are essential for electrical safety — earthing protects you from faulty appliances, bonding protects you from faults on other people's installations reaching you through shared metalwork.
Why has my EICR failed on bonding?
The most common reasons are: main bonding conductors are missing or undersized (6mm² instead of 10mm²), bonding clamps are corroded or missing, bonding is connected to the wrong pipe (e.g., after the meter instead of before it), or supplementary bonding is missing in bathrooms. These are all fixable and relatively inexpensive.
What is a TT earthing system and why does it matter?
A TT system means the DNO does not provide an earth connection — your property relies on its own earth rod driven into the ground. This is common in rural areas. TT systems require an RCD on every circuit because the earth fault loop impedance is much higher. If you are on a TT system, the earth rod condition is critical to your safety.
Do plastic pipes need bonding?
Internal plastic pipes do not need bonding because they are not conductive. However, the main bonding must still be connected where metallic services enter the building — even if the pipes transition to plastic inside. If the entire service is plastic from the street, bonding for that service is not required, but this should be verified by your electrician.
Can I do earthing and bonding work myself?
No. Earthing and bonding are safety-critical aspects of your electrical installation. Incorrect work can create dangerous conditions — including making metalwork live or preventing protective devices from operating in a fault. This work must be carried out by a qualified electrician who can test and verify the installation.
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