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This document describes the loss of ground connections at a building leading to loss of electrical power and dangerous risk of electrocution. Readers of this article should also be sure to review Safety Hazards and Safe Electrical Inspection Procedures for Inspectors examining Residential Electrical Systems and Local Electrical Grounding for safety procedures during inspection of the grounding system. Also, see details about electrical grounding at Electrical Circuits, shorts, and at Electrical Wiring in Old Houses and at Electricity Basics - how it works. © Copyright 2008 Daniel Friedman, All Rights Reserved. Information Accuracy & Bias Pledge is at below-left. Use links at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website. Case History of an Electrical Ground Failure - a Double Fault Leads to Loss of Electrical Power in San Miguel de Allende, MexicoNever assume anything during a building inspection. For example, never assume that because you see that ground wires are present, that the building and its electrical system are safely grounded. First of all, there are usually at least two ground connections at a building: One ground source is an incoming ground wire from the electrical service is grounded somewhere by the utility company - don't' assume that it's connected. The second and critical ground source at a building is the building's own local connection to earth through one or more grounding electrodes, or in older buildings, possibly by a connection between the electrical panel's ground bus and a metal water pipe entering the building from outdoors. Dim lights and no refrigerator after a storm: In a home in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico after a severe rain storm the building's lights were severely dimmed. If the occupants turned on any high-amperage device such as a toaster or refrigerator, the lights began to flicker. The home's refrigerator motor would not even start. We assumed (that was the first mistake) that the building's connection to the electrical utility company's overhead service wire had been lost because we saw that wet tree branches had leaned over, pulling on the service drop wire. Measuring electrical voltage showed that 120V was available at the wiring lugs in the electric meter base (photo below), but when any electrical load was placed on the building electrical system voltage plummeted. After more than a week of haggling with CFE, the electric utility company, and after watching their service tech climb poles, cut and re-make electrical connections to the building's service entry cables, nothing was changed,and the building still did not have functional electrical power. While waiting for the electrical utility company, CFE (Comision Federal de Electricidad) in San Miguel to get around to fixing their own ground ("cable de tierra") back at their pole, the electrician installed a new and longer grounding electrode at the building's electrical service. Loss of all building ground connections was extremely dangerous: Assuring that the building had at least one working ground was very smart. The near total loss of electrical grounding at this building could certainly have killed someone.
Use links just below or at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website. ELECTRICAL GROUND SYSTEM INSPECTION |
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ELECRICAL PANEL INSPECTION COURSE SUMMARY ELECTRICAL INSPECTION SAFETY ELECTRICAL VOCABULARY SERVICE DROP SERVICE ENTRY WIRING DETERMINE SERVICE AMPACITY ELECTRICAL GROUND SYSTEM INSPECTION MAIN DISCONNECT SYSTEM GROUNDING DISTRIBUTION PANELS More Information InspectAPedia ® Home & Site Map Electrical Contact Us |
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ELECRICAL PANEL INSPECTION COURSE SUMMARY ELECTRICAL INSPECTION SAFETY ELECTRICAL VOCABULARY SERVICE DROP SERVICE ENTRY WIRING DETERMINE SERVICE AMPACITY ELECTRICAL GROUND SYSTEM INSPECTION MAIN DISCONNECT SYSTEM GROUNDING DISTRIBUTION PANELS More Information InspectAPedia ® Home & Site Map Air Conditioning InspectAPedia Bookstore Electrical Environment Exteriors Heating Home Inspection Insulate Ventilate Interiors Mold Inspect/Test Plumbing Water Septic Roofing Structure Accuracy & Bias Pledge Contact Us |
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11/14/2008 - 08/28/2008 - www.inspect-ny.com/electric/Electrical_Ground_Lost.htm - © 2008-2008 Copyright Daniel Friedman All Rights Reserved - InspectAPedia® is a Registered U.S. Trademark