Re: ELectrical System
Don,
Mike Holt says 97% of electricians dont understanding grounding, but 100% are doing it. Does this mean that only 3% of the grounding systems in the world are correct?
OSHA doesn't mean anything to most contractors that are not involved in large projects. This constitutes 2/3 of all contractors in Florida alone. These are the mom and pop shops that hardly pull permits unless they have to.
Many facilities and manufacturing plants slip throught the cracks and never truely train or comply with OSHA regulations. I absolutely agree that unqualified persons should not perform work on systems or equipment thay are not familiar with, but I know it is happening right now as I type and will ocntinue to do so forever.
I contracted some work at a large aricultural facilty that had one corner-grounded service of a few dozen faciltiy-wide systems. The company had three enigineers and an electrical crew of 9. None of them knew how this system worked and how to make proper installations on it. They just used conventional three-phase equipment and were even fusing the grounded leg. This was just one of a million things this place was doing wrong.
So, the problem wasn't troubleshooting a proper operating and installed corner-grounded system. The problem is that many of these systems have been altered and now incorporate improper methods and connections. It makes for quite a mess.
Bryan
[ July 10, 2003, 03:35 PM: Message edited by: bphgravity ]