Hey guys,
I know this topic has been addressed many times in the forum and I feel I have a good idea of swimming pool equipotential bonding but I wanted to run a scenario I'm dealing with by you guys to see if you could offer any insight and or confirm what I'm thinking.
In ground pool. Probably 30 years old. On the water. One metal ladder and metal one pool light. Client reported tingling in the deep end near the pool light. Checked everything near the pool equipment bonding wise - all good. Pump is GFCI protected. Sure enough I found about 1.5 volts from the metal pool light shell - underwater - to the surface of the water when I stretch my leads as far as they can go (about 3-4 feet). I know you are supposed to drain the pool to test pool light bonding but we haven't gotten that far. I have about .5 volts from the metal ladder to the water. The ladder has continuity to the bond wire near the pool equipment. I found the EGC for the light connected to the brass pipe and brass pool light junction box so I disconnected that, ran a dedicated bonding conductor and reconnected everything so that the pool light shell now has continuity to the bond wire - no change. Light on or off - no change. Kill power to pool subpanel and disconnect ground and neutral conductors - no change. Shut the entire property down via 400 amp disconnect - no change and, on the load side of the disconnect with the breaker off I'm getting 27 volts to ground on phase 1 and 17 to ground on phase 2 which I think is strange. Anyway, there's obviously some stray voltage issue in the ground either from the utility or neighbors property that is finding its way to the pool light shell.
The issue I'm having is that Mike says in the pool bonding video that as long as something metal in the pool is bonded then the water is bonded but... at the same time says that if a metal ladder is bonded and the pool shell is not that then there will be voltage entering the pool at a gradient if the ladder becomes energized. Therefore if the ladder is bonded the pool water is not bonded because the pool water resistance is too high. I think based on what I'm finding here is that the pool shell bond (or bond in general) has been compromised because I have a difference of potential between the metal pool light and the water. I don't want to tell the client they have to rip everything up but I realize that might be the case.
I was going to try and experiment with a few things - maybe run a bond wire to a ground rod and stick that in the water in an attempt to bond the water and see if that changes anything. Let me know what you guys would do.
I know this topic has been addressed many times in the forum and I feel I have a good idea of swimming pool equipotential bonding but I wanted to run a scenario I'm dealing with by you guys to see if you could offer any insight and or confirm what I'm thinking.
In ground pool. Probably 30 years old. On the water. One metal ladder and metal one pool light. Client reported tingling in the deep end near the pool light. Checked everything near the pool equipment bonding wise - all good. Pump is GFCI protected. Sure enough I found about 1.5 volts from the metal pool light shell - underwater - to the surface of the water when I stretch my leads as far as they can go (about 3-4 feet). I know you are supposed to drain the pool to test pool light bonding but we haven't gotten that far. I have about .5 volts from the metal ladder to the water. The ladder has continuity to the bond wire near the pool equipment. I found the EGC for the light connected to the brass pipe and brass pool light junction box so I disconnected that, ran a dedicated bonding conductor and reconnected everything so that the pool light shell now has continuity to the bond wire - no change. Light on or off - no change. Kill power to pool subpanel and disconnect ground and neutral conductors - no change. Shut the entire property down via 400 amp disconnect - no change and, on the load side of the disconnect with the breaker off I'm getting 27 volts to ground on phase 1 and 17 to ground on phase 2 which I think is strange. Anyway, there's obviously some stray voltage issue in the ground either from the utility or neighbors property that is finding its way to the pool light shell.
The issue I'm having is that Mike says in the pool bonding video that as long as something metal in the pool is bonded then the water is bonded but... at the same time says that if a metal ladder is bonded and the pool shell is not that then there will be voltage entering the pool at a gradient if the ladder becomes energized. Therefore if the ladder is bonded the pool water is not bonded because the pool water resistance is too high. I think based on what I'm finding here is that the pool shell bond (or bond in general) has been compromised because I have a difference of potential between the metal pool light and the water. I don't want to tell the client they have to rip everything up but I realize that might be the case.
I was going to try and experiment with a few things - maybe run a bond wire to a ground rod and stick that in the water in an attempt to bond the water and see if that changes anything. Let me know what you guys would do.