Praedatus1
Member
- Location
- Portland, Oregon
Okay so here's the story.... Workers doing street repair for water main took apart a water line going to a house, when he did, he got electrocuted when he bridged the pipes with his hands... we got called, I inspected and found this:
The panel has 3Wire SE back to back with meter, which is underground service...wires going out of meter to the pole are 4/0 4/0 2/0 and 35 feet away they go up the pole 2/0 2/0 #2 bare solid(neutral), so somewhere underground there must be a splice. The panel has a 1/2 emt pipe coming out the top and runs 5 feet to a waterpipe clamp with a #4 bare ground in it bonding the pipe. With the pipe clamp ON OR OFF, I get around HALF the house CURRENT measured through my amp-clamp meter. The rest of the basement is finished, so I do not know of another bond to the water, but there must be one buried somewhere. I took the bond clamp off and tried to measure voltage, and got 12 volts or so, but when I "touch" the clamp to the pipe there is sparking and it "hums" until tightened. Regardless, when the workers took the pipe apart, it IMMEDIATELY blew up the guy's washing machine and 2 surge suppressors on computer equip. FRIED and melted.
I am thinking the underground neutral is corroding apart and had just enough continuity to get some of the return current. When they took apart the water pipe the system went haywire and got weird voltages due to the loss of its "supplemental neutral"(although I dont think thats what water pipes are supposed to be, right?) ...The City of Portland says no way, the problem is ours. They also say that current on the water pipe is "normal"...Really?? Help!!
Tim
The panel has 3Wire SE back to back with meter, which is underground service...wires going out of meter to the pole are 4/0 4/0 2/0 and 35 feet away they go up the pole 2/0 2/0 #2 bare solid(neutral), so somewhere underground there must be a splice. The panel has a 1/2 emt pipe coming out the top and runs 5 feet to a waterpipe clamp with a #4 bare ground in it bonding the pipe. With the pipe clamp ON OR OFF, I get around HALF the house CURRENT measured through my amp-clamp meter. The rest of the basement is finished, so I do not know of another bond to the water, but there must be one buried somewhere. I took the bond clamp off and tried to measure voltage, and got 12 volts or so, but when I "touch" the clamp to the pipe there is sparking and it "hums" until tightened. Regardless, when the workers took the pipe apart, it IMMEDIATELY blew up the guy's washing machine and 2 surge suppressors on computer equip. FRIED and melted.
I am thinking the underground neutral is corroding apart and had just enough continuity to get some of the return current. When they took apart the water pipe the system went haywire and got weird voltages due to the loss of its "supplemental neutral"(although I dont think thats what water pipes are supposed to be, right?) ...The City of Portland says no way, the problem is ours. They also say that current on the water pipe is "normal"...Really?? Help!!
Tim