đ April 19, 2026
Learning to Admit When Iâm Wrong
I covered NEC Article 680 recentlyâspecifically pool bonding.
I said:
If you bond the deck and metal parts, you need to bond the water too.
Thatâs not always true.
Instead of doubling down, I got checkedâby Paul Abernathy.
And he didnât just say I was wrong.
He gave contextâthe kind you only get from actually knowing the code, not just reading it once and thinking youâve got it.
Because the truth is:
Pool bonding isnât black and white.
Water bonding depends on the installation.
The type of pool.
The materials involved.
Whatâs actually present.
Itâs all in the details I glossed over.
I couldâve argued.
Tried to justify it.
Kept digging the hole deeper.
Didnât.
I grabbed a notebook.
Went back to 680.26.
Figured out where my understanding broke.
Thatâs the job.
Not being right all the time.
Not sounding smart online.
Getting better.
Because in this trade, being wrong isnât what hurts youâ
staying wrong does.
Field takeaway:
If the pool shell is conductive and bonded (680.26(B)(1)), the water is already bonded.
Water bonding fittings (680.26(C)) are mainly for fiberglass/vinyl pools where no bonded metal contacts the water.