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Jim Lux wrote:
Thomas Horne wrote: I am an electrician by craft. The US National Electric Code Requires that underground metal water piping on the premise be used as a grounding electrode for the electrical system. There is no way around Ahhh...The water pipe must be bonded to the electrical system, but the main ground must be at the entrance. Here, we have plastic water pipe all the way to the main from the meter, yet we have to bond the meters which are metal with plastic running in and plastic running out. it. No matter how fast people talk you cannot avoid using an underground metal piping system as a grounding electrode unless the electrical inspector is incompetent. It's really easy to avoid here. We do not have metal piping available for grounding. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com That has nothing to do with not using an underground metal water pipe that is present on the premises. -- Tom Horne that would really depend on the local AHJ (Authority Having Jurisdiction).. For instance, in the City of Thousand Oaks, CA, only Concrete Encased Grounding Electrodes (aka Ufer grounds) are allowed in new construction. (other grounding electrodes are permitted, but you better have the Ufer ground, and, of course, they would need to be bonded together, per NEC). With respect to my house, built in 1998, I don't think there is a bonding jumper from water pipe to the system ground at the service entrance (which is a Ufer ground). Obviously, there IS a jumper from the telco drop, the cable TV drop, etc. to the ground at the service entrance (and all the "drops" are actually underground services in plastic conduit). Partly this is because the water service comes in on the opposite of the house from all the "wired" utilities. I'll have to go take a look, though. I believe the new code (which I don't have here to hand) does require that metallic water piping, if any, be bonded to the electrical system ground (presumably to eliminate "touch voltage"). I believe also, that the code prohibits use of a water pipe as the sole grounding electrode (NEC 250-(a)(2) in 1999 code, 250.53(D)(2) 2002,2005 codes). As always in code matters, what the AHJ says takes precedence. As a practical matter, a properly constructed Ufer ground is probably lower impedance and more reliable than rods, wires, and pipes. Jim Lux, P.E. W6RMK Jim I would hope you are aware that most concrete encased electrodes are not, in fact, a true UFER. In spite of that it is undoubtedly the most reliable electrode; which is not to say lowest impedance; commonly installed in homes. You are correct that an underground metal water piping electrode must always be supplemented with another electrode but the code still requires it to be used as an electrode were it is present on the premise. In my location the public water utility is entirely metallic, including the service laterals to buildings. It covers about fifty miles from north to south and more than thirty five miles east to west at it's widest point. That large an underground metal piping system has the lowest obtainable impedance to ground of any electrode on a premise served by the water system. -- Tom Horne |
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