Gategator37
Senior Member
If a lightning strike can generate over 200,000 volts what is the point of a ground rod that can only dissipate about 6,000 volts?
Designers always put it in there!
Why you are putting a ground rod at a light pole?
As i said, in post #4, different specs, but not code AFAIK.EE's love to spec 'em. It's boilerplate now.
As i said, in post #4, different specs, but not code AFAIK.
Am I wrong?
If a lightning strike can generate over 200,000 volts what is the point of a ground rod that can only dissipate about 6,000 volts?
Bonding yes but the question was a ground rod-- that is not bonding."Bonding assures that all metal masses are at the same electrical potential" from:
http://www.lightningsafety.com/nlsi_lhm/lpts.html
Bonding yes but the question was a ground rod-- that is not bonding.
Yes. But it is in effect bonding the pole to the earth.
Bonded (Bonding). Connected to establish electrical continuity and conductivity.
How do you bond something that really has poor conductivity?
Where I used to work they had an incident at a ball park where the hot leg came in contact with the pole but didn't trip the breaker and a kid got hurt. Since then they made VERY sure that the pole was solidly grounded. Lawyers and all that. Now I simply bond the pole to the rebar.
I have seen in Fla. where there are lightning rods, etc. at the top of tall poles.
RC
an extra ground rod does not facilitate the tripping of the OCPD