While wiring my shop, I noticed something very disturbing. My house
is not grounded. I open my main panel and there are the two hots and
one neutral.
Ground bus and neutral bus are connected and both ground and neutral
wires share the same bus.
My house is newer, only about 8 years old.
Why is there no ground? I know when I did the same work in FL I was
required to put in two ground rods.
Is this a concern or normal?
There probably is a ground. In the main breaker box (but not in any
sub-panels), the ground and the neutral are tied together. If you look on
the neutral/ground bus bar, you will probably see one fairly large wire (#4,
#6, #8 (hopefully no smaller)) that goes into a conduit or out through a
cable clamp. That larger wire probably ends up at a good earth ground.
However, it is possible, that the electrician is relying on the utility
neutral as a ground. THAT is not a good thing.
--
dbchamber at hotmail spam dot com
Remove the spam to reach me
>>> Elmar wrote:
>>>> While wiring my shop, I noticed something very disturbing. My house
>>>> is not grounded. I open my main panel and there are the two hots and
>>>> one neutral.
>>>>
>>>> Ground bus and neutral bus are connected and both ground and neutral
>>>> wires share the same bus.
>>>>
>>>> My house is newer, only about 8 years old.
>>>>
>>>> Why is there no ground? I know when I did the same work in FL I was
>>>> required to put in two ground rods.
>>>>
>>>> Is this a concern or normal?
>>
>
The biggest problem is finding a good earth ground to use as a reference.
If you have copper water pripe feeding the house or if you have a drilled
well, you can probably be sure of a good earth ground. You use an ohmeter
between your box ground and an actual ground. The resistance should be as
close to zero as your meter can read. The higher the resistance, the more
problems you can run into. Your box ground can start to float above zero
volts.
I miss the good old days of copper tubing and metal pipe. If you had a 100
foot run of metal pipe going out to a drilled well with 60 feet of casing,
you were pretty darn sure of a good ground. Even having 30 or 40 feet of
copper tubing going out to the water main made a pretty sure round. Now
with polybutelyne and other plastics in the system, it is harder to FIND a
good ground to use as a test.
I am not sure what the NEC requires anymore but the 2 places I built had 2
10 foot ground rounds driven 18" below grade and tied to the box with good
copper conductors.
--
dbchamber at hotmail spam dot com
Remove the spam to reach me
<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Fri, 05 Nov 2004 01:54:00 GMT, "Dave"
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>Is there any way to indirectly test to see if there is an adequate ground
>>in
>>a system?
>>
>>Dave
>
> lick it.
My meaning of a box ground is the ground bus inside your breaker box. An
earth ground is an actual ground such as a ground rod or a buried length of
pipe. An ohmeter is not the best tool but if the ohmeter measures a
difference bewtween the two points then your breaker box groun is not really
gounded.
--
dbchamber at hotmail spam dot com
Remove the spam to reach me
"Bob Peterson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> "David Chamberlain" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>> The biggest problem is finding a good earth ground to use as a reference.
>> If you have copper water pripe feeding the house or if you have a drilled
>> well, you can probably be sure of a good earth ground. You use an
>> ohmeter between your box ground and an actual ground. The resistance
>> should be as close to zero as your meter can read. The higher the
>> resistance, the more problems you can run into. Your box ground can
>> start to float above zero volts.
>
> Just what is a "box ground" versus a "good earth ground".
>
> The reality is you cannot test earthing with a normal voltmeter and get
> anything even remotely resembling a result that is meaningful.
>
>
>>
>> I miss the good old days of copper tubing and metal pipe. If you had a
>> 100 foot run of metal pipe going out to a drilled well with 60 feet of
>> casing, you were pretty darn sure of a good ground. Even having 30 or 40
>> feet of copper tubing going out to the water main made a pretty sure
>> round. Now with polybutelyne and other plastics in the system, it is
>> harder to FIND a good ground to use as a test.
>>
>> I am not sure what the NEC requires anymore but the 2 places I built had
>> 2 10 foot ground rounds driven 18" below grade and tied to the box with
>> good copper conductors.
>>
>>
>> --
>> dbchamber at hotmail spam dot com
>>
>> Remove the spam to reach me
>>
>> <[email protected]> wrote in message
>> news:[email protected]...
>>> On Fri, 05 Nov 2004 01:54:00 GMT, "Dave"
>>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>>>Is there any way to indirectly test to see if there is an adequate
>>>>ground in
>>>>a system?
>>>>
>>>>Dave
>>>
>>> lick it.
>>
>>
>
>
Bob Peterson said:
>
><Greg G.> wrote in message
>news:[email protected]...
>> Robert Galloway said:
>>
>>>Don't know much about this but it seems like I remember that the code
>>>most places prohibits more than one ground. Aren't you required to have
>>>a ground for the main service or panel and no secondary ground at any
>>>sub panel?
>>
>> If the sub-panel is located in a separate building from the main
>> panel, code generally calls for a local ground for the sub-panel.
>
>Generally you are required to have another grounding electrode (typically a
>ground rod) but not necessarily a connection between earth and neutral at
>that subpanel. the ground rod is for lightning protection.
Err... I guess I was unclear/incomplete. It is a convoluted subject,
but here is the entire run-down as per the 2002 NEC.
When the sub-panel is located in the same building, you use the ground
provided in the main panel, and DO NOT bond the ground and neutral
together in the sub-panel - requiring a 4 wire feed.
A detached structure with no metallic paths between it and the main
building, MAY use a 3 wire feed, but MUST use a grounding electrode
with the neutral to ground UNbonded in the sub-panel.
A detached structure with no metallic paths between it and the main
building, MAY ALSO use a 4 wire feed, but MAY also use a grounding
electrode, with the neutral to ground UNbonded in the sub-panel. It
is highly recommended to have a secondary ground rod, and must NOT
bond the ground and neutral in the sub-panel when the sub-panel is
located in a separate building.
Any detached structure that has an existing non-current carrying
metallic path such as water pipes, intercoms, telephone lines, etc.
installed between the main structure and the detached structure MUST
have an equipment grounding conductor installed with the feeders
installed between the two buildings AS WELL as using the water pipe as
a ground, AND a supplementary grounding rod, even if an
interconnecting metallic water pipe is also connected as ground.
Article 250-32-B-1 & 2
It is primarily to prevent telephones, water pipes, intercoms and such
from presenting a shock hazard when they are at differing earth
potentials, aggrevated by charged atmosphere/earth conditions.
If there is no grounding electrode system serving the detached garage,
then you must install a new grounding electrode system as described in
Article 250-50. If none of those listed in Article 250-50 is
available, then you may use a made electrode as found in Article
250-52. Article 250-50 lists any metal water pipe in direct contact
with earth, any rebar in concrete, any grounding rings, and many more
as an approved grounding electrode to be combined as a grounding
electrode system. If available all of those grounding electrode
sources listed in Article 250-50 must be connected together to make
the grounding electrode system. Most likely, if you have a metal water
pipe run underground between the two buildings, then you have a water
pipe in direct contact with earth and that metal water pipe, and any
other grounding method listed in Article 250-50 must be connected
together to make that grounding electrode system. If that metal water
pipe is installed between the two buildings, then you must use that as
part of the grounding electrode system but you must also supply a
supplemental grounding electrode to back up that water pipe in case
that metal water pipe is removed at a later date. Article 250-50-A-2
Remember, if any non current carrying metal connection is existing
between that main building, and the detached building, then you must
install an equipment grounding conductor between the two buildings,
with that feeder and as a part of that feeder installed between the
two buildings. Article 250-32-B-1 & 2
Whew...
Greg G.
"Elmar" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> While wiring my shop, I noticed something very disturbing. My house
> is not grounded. I open my main panel and there are the two hots and
> one neutral.
>
> Ground bus and neutral bus are connected and both ground and neutral
> wires share the same bus.
This is usually the case with service panels.
>
> My house is newer, only about 8 years old.
>
> Why is there no ground? I know when I did the same work in FL I was
> required to put in two ground rods.
>
> Is this a concern or normal?
There is probably a green wire snaking out to your grounding electrode,
usually a rod driven in the ground. It could also be connected to various
substitutes for a ground rod that are allowed as well.
You cannot connect the neutral to earth except at the service point. Most
often this is done either by using the neutral bar as the earth connection
point and as a combined ground bar/neutral bar, or in newer panels via a
bonding jumper between the equipment ground bus and the neutral bus in the
service panel.
You can have as many ground rods as you want interconnected with each other
either directly or through an equipment grounding conductor.
I don't think the phrase "secondary ground" has any defined meaning in the
NEC.
A subpanel (another term that I don't recall being defined in the NEC) could
have its own ground rod but may or may not have a connection from the ground
rod to neutral at that panel. Most often in most residential settings it
would not have that connection.
"Robert Galloway" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Don't know much about this but it seems like I remember that the code most
> places prohibits more than one ground. Aren't you required to have a
> ground for the main service or panel and no secondary ground at any sub
> panel?
>
> bob g.
>
> Bob Peterson wrote:
>
>> "Elmar" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>> news:[email protected]...
>>
>>>While wiring my shop, I noticed something very disturbing. My house
>>>is not grounded. I open my main panel and there are the two hots and
>>>one neutral.
>>>
>>>Ground bus and neutral bus are connected and both ground and neutral
>>>wires share the same bus.
>>
>>
>> This is usually the case with service panels.
>>
>>
>>>My house is newer, only about 8 years old.
>>>
>>>Why is there no ground? I know when I did the same work in FL I was
>>>required to put in two ground rods.
>>>
>>>Is this a concern or normal?
>>
>>
>> There is probably a green wire snaking out to your grounding electrode,
>> usually a rod driven in the ground. It could also be connected to
>> various substitutes for a ground rod that are allowed as well.
<Greg G.> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Robert Galloway said:
>
>>Don't know much about this but it seems like I remember that the code
>>most places prohibits more than one ground. Aren't you required to have
>>a ground for the main service or panel and no secondary ground at any
>>sub panel?
>
> If the sub-panel is located in a separate building from the main
> panel, code generally calls for a local ground for the sub-panel.
Generally you are required to have another grounding electrode (typically a
ground rod) but not necessarily a connection between earth and neutral at
that subpanel. the ground rod is for lightning protection.
>
>
> Greg G.
"David Chamberlain" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> The biggest problem is finding a good earth ground to use as a reference.
> If you have copper water pripe feeding the house or if you have a drilled
> well, you can probably be sure of a good earth ground. You use an ohmeter
> between your box ground and an actual ground. The resistance should be as
> close to zero as your meter can read. The higher the resistance, the more
> problems you can run into. Your box ground can start to float above zero
> volts.
Just what is a "box ground" versus a "good earth ground".
The reality is you cannot test earthing with a normal voltmeter and get
anything even remotely resembling a result that is meaningful.
>
> I miss the good old days of copper tubing and metal pipe. If you had a
> 100 foot run of metal pipe going out to a drilled well with 60 feet of
> casing, you were pretty darn sure of a good ground. Even having 30 or 40
> feet of copper tubing going out to the water main made a pretty sure
> round. Now with polybutelyne and other plastics in the system, it is
> harder to FIND a good ground to use as a test.
>
> I am not sure what the NEC requires anymore but the 2 places I built had 2
> 10 foot ground rounds driven 18" below grade and tied to the box with good
> copper conductors.
>
>
> --
> dbchamber at hotmail spam dot com
>
> Remove the spam to reach me
>
> <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>> On Fri, 05 Nov 2004 01:54:00 GMT, "Dave"
>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>>Is there any way to indirectly test to see if there is an adequate ground
>>>in
>>>a system?
>>>
>>>Dave
>>
>> lick it.
>
>
This is sort of true. There should be a dead short between the ground bar
in your service panel and your ground rod (or whatever you are using for
your grounding electrode) and a normal VOM should show that.
However, its not a very definitive test since there could be a single strand
of wire in an otherwise broken off ground wire that would still show as a
dead short because VOM ohm ranges operate at a very low voltage and very low
current. or someone might have run an undersized wire - the test would
still show a short, but in both cases there is a major problem but the
"test" shows OK.
If it shows an open circuit there is surely a problem.
if it shows some level of resistance above a dead short (even say 100 ohms)
its hard to interpret. Could just be there is corrosion on the outside of
the ground bar where you hooked up yet the connection itself is fine.
"David Chamberlain" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> My meaning of a box ground is the ground bus inside your breaker box. An
> earth ground is an actual ground such as a ground rod or a buried length
> of pipe. An ohmeter is not the best tool but if the ohmeter measures a
> difference bewtween the two points then your breaker box groun is not
> really gounded.
>
>
> --
> dbchamber at hotmail spam dot com
>
> Remove the spam to reach me
> "Bob Peterson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>>
>> "David Chamberlain" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>> news:[email protected]...
>>> The biggest problem is finding a good earth ground to use as a
>>> reference. If you have copper water pripe feeding the house or if you
>>> have a drilled well, you can probably be sure of a good earth ground.
>>> You use an ohmeter between your box ground and an actual ground. The
>>> resistance should be as close to zero as your meter can read. The
>>> higher the resistance, the more problems you can run into. Your box
>>> ground can start to float above zero volts.
>>
>> Just what is a "box ground" versus a "good earth ground".
>>
>> The reality is you cannot test earthing with a normal voltmeter and get
>> anything even remotely resembling a result that is meaningful.
>>
>>
>>>
>>> I miss the good old days of copper tubing and metal pipe. If you had a
>>> 100 foot run of metal pipe going out to a drilled well with 60 feet of
>>> casing, you were pretty darn sure of a good ground. Even having 30 or
>>> 40 feet of copper tubing going out to the water main made a pretty sure
>>> round. Now with polybutelyne and other plastics in the system, it is
>>> harder to FIND a good ground to use as a test.
>>>
>>> I am not sure what the NEC requires anymore but the 2 places I built had
>>> 2 10 foot ground rounds driven 18" below grade and tied to the box with
>>> good copper conductors.
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> dbchamber at hotmail spam dot com
>>>
>>> Remove the spam to reach me
>>>
>>> <[email protected]> wrote in message
>>> news:[email protected]...
>>>> On Fri, 05 Nov 2004 01:54:00 GMT, "Dave"
>>>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>Is there any way to indirectly test to see if there is an adequate
>>>>>ground in
>>>>>a system?
>>>>>
>>>>>Dave
>>>>
>>>> lick it.
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
>
Its is correct for the main panel.
The neutral and ground share the same bus. Only in a sub-panel will the
ground be isolated from the neutral bus.
Dave
"Elmar" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> While wiring my shop, I noticed something very disturbing. My house
> is not grounded. I open my main panel and there are the two hots and
> one neutral.
>
> Ground bus and neutral bus are connected and both ground and neutral
> wires share the same bus.
>
> My house is newer, only about 8 years old.
>
> Why is there no ground? I know when I did the same work in FL I was
> required to put in two ground rods.
>
> Is this a concern or normal?
Son in law discovered the same on their "new" (20yr old) house. Might have
been because the subdivision is on an old lakeside dune, and a driven rod
would have trouble gaining a ground. His dad, who works for a power
company, came up with ten feet of rod to drive. Next time the weather gets
dry, we'll see.
Guard tower they built at the airbase, also in sand, had to have an
extensive grid buried to keep St Elmo and lightning away.
"Elmar" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> While wiring my shop, I noticed something very disturbing. My house
> is not grounded. I open my main panel and there are the two hots and
> one neutral.
>
> Ground bus and neutral bus are connected and both ground and neutral
> wires share the same bus.
>
> My house is newer, only about 8 years old.
>
> Why is there no ground? I know when I did the same work in FL I was
> required to put in two ground rods.
>
> Is this a concern or normal?
To summarize or correct many responses. Every utility wire
entering the building must connect to same single point earth
ground before or as it enters the building. That means AC
electric neutral (one type of ground) must connect to earth
ground (what the code calls a ground electrode) where it
enters the building (called service entrance). This earthing
wire could be at meter or at breaker box with the mains (100
amp or 200 amp) circuit breaker. Meter or breaker box is
often unique to local utility requirements and typically is a
6 AWG or larger bare copper wire.
All other utilities (phone, cable TV, etc) must also make a
less than 20 foot connection to this earth ground.
This earth ground is required for human safety. NEC that
requires these earthing connections is only concerned with
human safety. However this earthing system must meet or be
enhanced to also provide transistor safety. No earth ground
is why plug-in protectors do nothing effective - another topic
beyond the scope of this discussion.
Water pipe is no longer acceptable for earthing as of 1990.
The water pipe must connect to breaker box safety ground
(where earth ground, receptacle safety ground wires, AC
neutral wire all meet) for human safety reasons - not to be an
earth ground connection. Furthermore, no wire may connect to
water pipes with the intent of dumping electricity into that
pipe. Wire connections to pipes are only to remove
electricity from those pipes - a fundamental change in code.
In addition, some jurisdictions require any metallic bathtub
be hardwired (again 6 AWG wire) from drain pipe to breaker box
safety ground. Further information on safety grounding is
summarized by volts500 in the newsgroup alt.home.repair
entitled "Grounding Rod Info" on 12 July 2003 at
http://tinyurl.com/hkjq
How to find the earth ground? Again, every utility must
connect to that earth ground. Follow the wires. All utilities
must be earthed to same grounding electrode. If not, then an
important electrical upgrade is necessary and may require an
electrician. No earth ground means no human protection and no
transistor protection.
As noted, remove sub panels - those powered by the mains
breaker box - would have safety ground and neutral wire
separate and would not connect to earth ground.
Consider geology. For example, if constructed in sandy soil
or on a boundary line between different geologies, then
consider more earthing than just a few earth ground rods.
Well pump protection may also require additional
considerations. Again, reasons involve facts beyond this
scope.
What will a plug-in ground tester report? Which ground is
it testing for? Tester can only detect bad breaker box safety
ground connection. It will not report a good safety ground
connection nor will it test for any other grounds such as
earth ground. Anyone recommending tests using "one of those
plug testers into a wall socket" should have known this before
posting.
Then another earth ground that is essential to safe home.
Note the failures exampled here:
http://www.tvtower.com/fpl.html
Happy earthing. Don't get your knees too dirty.
Elmar wrote:
> While wiring my shop, I noticed something very disturbing. My house
> is not grounded. I open my main panel and there are the two hots and
> one neutral.
>
> Ground bus and neutral bus are connected and both ground and neutral
> wires share the same bus.
>
> My house is newer, only about 8 years old.
>
> Why is there no ground? I know when I did the same work in FL I was
> required to put in two ground rods.
>
> Is this a concern or normal?
NEC does not care how many appliances are destroyed by
surges. It only cares about human safety which is why NEC
demands that earth ground rod. Example, in one home, the
transformer neutral failed. House did not have an earth
ground rod. So electricity used gas pipes until meter gasket
failed and house exploded. Just another reason why that earth
ground rod is essential to human safety. If earth ground was
not required for human safety, then NEC would not even require
it.
Scott. Did you include time in your wire calculations.
Furthermore, cross sectional area has less significance due to
something called skin effect. That 6 AWG wire is sufficient
to earth direct and typical lightning strikes without wire
damage. Should you think otherwise, then put up numbers to
support your speculations.
In the meantime, learn something else. How to identify
ineffective protectors. No mention of earthing and no
dedicated earth ground because they don't even claim to
protect from typically destructive transients. Protection
from lightning means that earth ground is essential. Earthing
is THE one and most critical component for lightning
protection - no way around that fact.
We earth for two reasons - human safety and transistor
safety.
Scott Lurndal wrote:
> [email protected] (bob peterson) writes:
> >w_tom <[email protected]> wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
>>
>><snipped>
>>
>> A couple of things. Grounding (hooking up to a grounding electrode)
>> is really not so much a matter of human safety as it is to provide a
>> path for lightning and a way to equalize voltages.
>
> Please calculate the the cross-sectional area of a conductor required
> to carry the current from a lightning strike, and compare and contrast
> that with the typical #12AWG cross-sectional area.
>
> Grounding an electrical system will not provide a path for lightning.
>
> scott
Three.
To avoid dust explosions ....
"w_tom" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> We earth for two reasons - human safety and transistor
> safety.
>
Dust explosions are another part of code for human safety.
George wrote:
> Three.
>
> To avoid dust explosions ....
>
> "w_tom" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>> We earth for two reasons - human safety and transistor
>> safety.
Not really, only documented cases are with dragons....
"w_tom" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Dust explosions are another part of code for human safety.
>
> George wrote:
> > Three.
> >
> > To avoid dust explosions ....
> >
> > "w_tom" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> > news:[email protected]...
> >> We earth for two reasons - human safety and transistor
> >> safety.
w_tom <[email protected]> wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
<snipped>
A couple of things. Grounding (hooking up to a grounding electrode)
is really not so much a matter of human safety as it is to provide a
path for lightning and a way to equalize voltages.
The real protection for humans comes from bonding all the metal pieces
in your home that might become energized and then connecting that to
your neutral so that if the conductive pieces do become energized, a
short circuit will occur and trip the branch circuit overcurrent
protection.
Grounding (making the connection to earth) by itself really does not
provide any substantial protection.
[email protected] (Scott Lurndal) wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
> [email protected] (bob peterson) writes:
> >w_tom <[email protected]> wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
> >
> ><snipped>
> >
> >A couple of things. Grounding (hooking up to a grounding electrode)
> >is really not so much a matter of human safety as it is to provide a
> >path for lightning and a way to equalize voltages.
>
> Please calculate the the cross-sectional area of a conductor required
> to carry the current from a lightning strike, and compare and contrast
> that with the typical #12AWG cross-sectional area.
>
> Grounding an electrical system will not provide a path for lightning.
>
> scott
of course it does. lightning wants to find a path to ground. it will
either do it through your home or you can provide it a way to get to
ground easier. the idea is to make it easier for lightning to go to
earth through the ground rod rather then through your house to earth.
Don't know much about this but it seems like I remember that the code
most places prohibits more than one ground. Aren't you required to have
a ground for the main service or panel and no secondary ground at any
sub panel?
bob g.
Bob Peterson wrote:
> "Elmar" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
>>While wiring my shop, I noticed something very disturbing. My house
>>is not grounded. I open my main panel and there are the two hots and
>>one neutral.
>>
>>Ground bus and neutral bus are connected and both ground and neutral
>>wires share the same bus.
>
>
> This is usually the case with service panels.
>
>
>>My house is newer, only about 8 years old.
>>
>>Why is there no ground? I know when I did the same work in FL I was
>>required to put in two ground rods.
>>
>>Is this a concern or normal?
>
>
> There is probably a green wire snaking out to your grounding electrode,
> usually a rod driven in the ground. It could also be connected to various
> substitutes for a ground rod that are allowed as well.
>
>
On Fri, 05 Nov 2004 01:54:00 GMT, "Dave"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Is there any way to indirectly test to see if there is an adequate ground in
>a system?
>
>Dave
lick it.
Is there any way of checking for ground indirectly, rather than just
physically looking to see if a wire is connected?
Dave
"Jim Swank" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Insufficient information.... The ground might well be present, but
> connected in the meter base rather than the main panel. This is common
> practice - check it before you panic.
>
> Also, if there is an outside main breaker mounted on a ppole with the
> meter enclosure, the ground could be there.
>
> Jim
>
>
> Elmar wrote:
>> While wiring my shop, I noticed something very disturbing. My house
>> is not grounded. I open my main panel and there are the two hots and
>> one neutral.
>>
>> Ground bus and neutral bus are connected and both ground and neutral
>> wires share the same bus.
>>
>> My house is newer, only about 8 years old.
>>
>> Why is there no ground? I know when I did the same work in FL I was
>> required to put in two ground rods.
>>
>> Is this a concern or normal?
Is there any way to indirectly test to see if there is an adequate ground in
a system?
Dave
"David Chamberlain" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> There probably is a ground. In the main breaker box (but not in any
> sub-panels), the ground and the neutral are tied together. If you look on
> the neutral/ground bus bar, you will probably see one fairly large wire
> (#4, #6, #8 (hopefully no smaller)) that goes into a conduit or out
> through a cable clamp. That larger wire probably ends up at a good earth
> ground.
>
> However, it is possible, that the electrician is relying on the utility
> neutral as a ground. THAT is not a good thing.
>
>
> --
> dbchamber at hotmail spam dot com
>
> Remove the spam to reach me
>>>> Elmar wrote:
>>>>> While wiring my shop, I noticed something very disturbing. My house
>>>>> is not grounded. I open my main panel and there are the two hots and
>>>>> one neutral.
>>>>>
>>>>> Ground bus and neutral bus are connected and both ground and neutral
>>>>> wires share the same bus.
>>>>>
>>>>> My house is newer, only about 8 years old.
>>>>>
>>>>> Why is there no ground? I know when I did the same work in FL I was
>>>>> required to put in two ground rods.
>>>>>
>>>>> Is this a concern or normal?
>>>
>>
>
>
Is the ground bus then hooked up to some kind of ground wire? What
happens if you insert one of those plug testers into a wall socket -- do you
get a green light indicating adequate ground?
Dave
"Elmar" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> While wiring my shop, I noticed something very disturbing. My house
> is not grounded. I open my main panel and there are the two hots and
> one neutral.
>
> Ground bus and neutral bus are connected and both ground and neutral
> wires share the same bus.
>
> My house is newer, only about 8 years old.
>
> Why is there no ground? I know when I did the same work in FL I was
> required to put in two ground rods.
>
> Is this a concern or normal?
"Elmar" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> While wiring my shop, I noticed something very disturbing. My house
> is not grounded. I open my main panel and there are the two hots and
> one neutral.
>
> Ground bus and neutral bus are connected and both ground and neutral
> wires share the same bus.
>
Yes, that is how a panel is done; ground and neutral are the same bus. On a
subpanel they are separated.
> My house is newer, only about 8 years old.
>
> Why is there no ground? I know when I did the same work in FL I was
> required to put in two ground rods.
There should be a cable going from the ground bus to your ground rods/water
pipe. Look carefully. If it is not there, you have a problem; but it seems
unlikely.
>
> Is this a concern or normal?
Insufficient information.... The ground might well be present, but
connected in the meter base rather than the main panel. This is common
practice - check it before you panic.
Also, if there is an outside main breaker mounted on a ppole with the
meter enclosure, the ground could be there.
Jim
Elmar wrote:
> While wiring my shop, I noticed something very disturbing. My house
> is not grounded. I open my main panel and there are the two hots and
> one neutral.
>
> Ground bus and neutral bus are connected and both ground and neutral
> wires share the same bus.
>
> My house is newer, only about 8 years old.
>
> Why is there no ground? I know when I did the same work in FL I was
> required to put in two ground rods.
>
> Is this a concern or normal?
On 3 Nov 2004 06:13:16 -0800, [email protected] (bob peterson) wrote:
>[email protected] (Scott Lurndal) wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
>> [email protected] (bob peterson) writes:
>> >w_tom <[email protected]> wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
>> >
>> ><snipped>
>> >
>> >A couple of things. Grounding (hooking up to a grounding electrode)
>> >is really not so much a matter of human safety as it is to provide a
>> >path for lightning and a way to equalize voltages.
>>
>> Please calculate the the cross-sectional area of a conductor required
>> to carry the current from a lightning strike, and compare and contrast
>> that with the typical #12AWG cross-sectional area.
>>
>> Grounding an electrical system will not provide a path for lightning.
>>
>> scott
>
>of course it does. lightning wants to find a path to ground. it will
>either do it through your home or you can provide it a way to get to
>ground easier. the idea is to make it easier for lightning to go to
>earth through the ground rod rather then through your house to earth.
hence, the old lightning rods on houses?
On Thu, 04 Nov 2004 21:25:25 -0700, [email protected] wrote:
>On Fri, 05 Nov 2004 01:54:00 GMT, "Dave"
><[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>Is there any way to indirectly test to see if there is an adequate ground in
>>a system?
>>
>>Dave
>
>lick it.
or as drunk Texans do around electric fences, pee on it..
On Wed, 03 Nov 2004 05:03:40 GMT, "Dave"
<[email protected]> wrote:
your local lowes, HD, Orchard supply, etc. will have fairly
inexpensive testers available..
I think the one we carry in our rv was about $20...
(lots of rv parks have bad grounding or inverted polarity)
>Is there any way of checking for ground indirectly, rather than just
>physically looking to see if a wire is connected?
>
>Dave
>
>"Jim Swank" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>news:[email protected]...
>> Insufficient information.... The ground might well be present, but
>> connected in the meter base rather than the main panel. This is common
>> practice - check it before you panic.
>>
>> Also, if there is an outside main breaker mounted on a ppole with the
>> meter enclosure, the ground could be there.
>>
>> Jim
>>
>>
>> Elmar wrote:
>>> While wiring my shop, I noticed something very disturbing. My house
>>> is not grounded. I open my main panel and there are the two hots and
>>> one neutral.
>>>
>>> Ground bus and neutral bus are connected and both ground and neutral
>>> wires share the same bus.
>>>
>>> My house is newer, only about 8 years old.
>>>
>>> Why is there no ground? I know when I did the same work in FL I was
>>> required to put in two ground rods.
>>>
>>> Is this a concern or normal?
>
On Mon, 01 Nov 2004 15:48:24 GMT, "toller" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>"Elmar" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>news:[email protected]...
>> Why is there no ground? I know when I did the same work in FL I was
>> required to put in two ground rods.
>
>There should be a cable going from the ground bus to your ground rods/water
>pipe. Look carefully. If it is not there, you have a problem; but it seems
>unlikely.
If your ground goes to a water pipe check it out a bit. In my previous
house I was doing some other remodeling when I discovered that the
water line coming into the house had at some point been re-done in
plastic. I had a ground to the galvanized pipe in the house, but
effectively no real ground since what actually went into the ground
was non-conductive. I drove an 8' rod and properly grounded things -
it was amazing, both my phone system and my computer worked better
after that.
Tim Douglass
http://www.DouglassClan.com
Robert Galloway said:
>Don't know much about this but it seems like I remember that the code
>most places prohibits more than one ground. Aren't you required to have
>a ground for the main service or panel and no secondary ground at any
>sub panel?
If the sub-panel is located in a separate building from the main
panel, code generally calls for a local ground for the sub-panel.
Greg G.
[email protected] (bob peterson) writes:
>w_tom <[email protected]> wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
>
><snipped>
>
>A couple of things. Grounding (hooking up to a grounding electrode)
>is really not so much a matter of human safety as it is to provide a
>path for lightning and a way to equalize voltages.
Please calculate the the cross-sectional area of a conductor required
to carry the current from a lightning strike, and compare and contrast
that with the typical #12AWG cross-sectional area.
Grounding an electrical system will not provide a path for lightning.
scott
On Mon, 01 Nov 2004 07:23:14 -0800, Elmar wrote:
> While wiring my shop, I noticed something very disturbing. My house is
> not grounded. I open my main panel and there are the two hots and one
> neutral.
>
> Ground bus and neutral bus are connected and both ground and neutral wires
> share the same bus.
>
> My house is newer, only about 8 years old.
>
> Why is there no ground? I know when I did the same work in FL I was
> required to put in two ground rods.
>
> Is this a concern or normal?
Usually, the neutral is grounded at the transformer, and the meter and
entrance panel share a common ground with the neutral in the entrance
panel bonded to ground. Any subpanels should have the neutral isolated
from ground.
-Doug
--
"It has been a source of great pain to me to have met with so many among
[my] opponents who had not the liberality to distinguish between
political and social opposition; who transferred at once to the person,
the hatred they bore to his political opinions." --Thomas Jefferson