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"zeno" wrote
Hi Jack, So could I light up a 100 watt light bulb with one terminal stuck in the earth out in the middle of a field and the other to the hot side of an AC circuit?...I guess so. Bill, Just before it blew up, it would light up, yes. Remember I said "With a properly resistive load" and that would be a very dangerous however possible experiment to attempt. The circuit breakers are set to prevent your haphazard determination of what current load is too much - the hot wire supply in should be matched with "cooler" (neutral) return, accounting for acceptable current usage by the load... up to the point where too much current generated heat trips the breaker. Nothing forces you (in your experiment) from keeping all of that available voltage (0v felt on neutral) as long as the current did not exceed 15a or whatever your breaker allows. Obviously a 100w light bulb shorted to ground would blow instantly, before the breaker could protect it.. The Earth is the ultimate return path I guess. The neutral as I understand it is the center tap of the high voltage step down transformer which takes two hot leads from the high voltage line and steps it down to 240V with a center tap being the "neutral". The neutral is then grounded for extra safety. The neutral (center tap) does not need to be grounded to provide the return path, but what my question is why the Earth per se is also a return path? I guess being such a large mass it is theoretically a zero potential. Would my theoretical light bulb get brighter as I drove the rod deeper into the earth? Assuming a series of (18) 100w bulbs on a 15a circuit (120v), yes the ground rod's resistance (5-15 ohm depending on soil) would allow less than the full brightness of the bulbs, until or if you were able to reduce the impedance by using a larger surface area rod and drive it deeper into wet soil. This is the same principle of making the very best and lowest impedance ground system you possibly can for lightning protection! 73's Jack Bill K6TAJ Jack Painter wrote: "zeno" wrote Oddly enough this circuit only used the hot side of the AC outlet and a cold water pipe ground to the chassis of the transmitter. Our house was built in the early 40s if that tells you anything about how they wired outlets in those days. My question: If I were to take a volt (amp) meter and put one probe in the hot side of an AC house outlet and the other probe to a metal rod stuck in the ground out in the middle of a field somewhere (presumably nowhere near a neutral leg), what would my meter read and why? Deep electro-philosophical answers welcome as long as it is expressed in terms a child could understand. (It seems that this little odd transmitter circuit avoided the neutral leg altogether-- just used the hot side and a ground). Bill K6TAJ Hi Bill, Ground is referenced at both the generating station and your home in order to complete the circuit. In your home's service mains panel, ground and neutral are bonded together. Before the days of the third wire, added purely for safety in the event of an equipment fault, a faulted piece of equipment still had a return path, just not the added measure we have today of a very short ground path (no pun intended) G With a properly resistive load you could still perform your field exercise, but it would have nothing to do with avoiding a nearby neutral wire which serves the same function anyway. Neutral was always and still is, the return path of a parallel circuit, nothing more or less. It is cold when no load is connected to it and hot (minus the resistance-consumed current of a load applied) when a load is connected. 73's Jack Virginia Beach, VA |
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