romex jockey101
Member
why is the nuetral and the grounding conductors bonded at the main panel is that what makes it a nuetral that its bonded to the grounding
thank you.so its bonded at the main panel so if ever a hot touches a grounded condutor[nuetral] it will give it a path to ground and trip the breaker.....A phase to ground fault needs a path back to the source to operate the OCP device. The grounding to neutral provides that path.
A "neutral" is established by the sourece (common-point of a wye, mid point of a single phase, etc.)
Ground has nothing to do with tripping the breaker, the EGC creates low impedance path back to the source.thank you.so its bonded at the main panel so if ever a hot touches a grounded condutor[nuetral] it will give it a path to ground and trip the breaker.....
thank you.so its bonded at the main panel so if ever a hot touches a grounded condutor[nuetral] it will give it a path to ground and trip the breaker.....
so the grounded conductor and gounding conductor are bonded so that the unbalced load will find its way back to the panel and leave through the sec nuetral....
so the grounded conductor and gounding conductor are bonded so that the unbalced load will find its way back to the panel and leave through the sec nuetral....
This graphic may be confusing in the context of the OP because it shows a meter reading 120V to earth instead of the guy with his hair standing on end, getting shocked.
obviously something is (confusing)...
I gave up
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That's a very nice writeup that George Stolz wrote, but it is subtitled, "The Big Picture", when in fact it should be subtitled "Mike Holtz' Picture". While Mike is very well respected, that doesn't automatically mean that everything he states is considered gospel across the whole industry. Mike's teachings have dispelled some misconceptions, but they have also created some as well.Then this link would be helpful.http://forums.mikeholt.com/showthre...ding-The-Big-Picture-Post?p=748232#post748232
Always remember electricity is not seeking ground it is seeking its source. You can have a fault (hot to metal) and if the metal path back to the specific source is bad the circuit will not trip. Correct equipment grounding includes an effective fault current path anything less is not correct and hazardous, read 250.4(A)(3)-(5).i understand egc is so if a hot[ungrounded condutor] touches a metal object it wont stay energized and use a human as a path to ground so we bond it to the egc so when a hot hit the meatl object it will flow through the egc and trip the breacker.