Re: GROUNDING A SERVICE
With a separate grounding wire (4 wire feeder), the 4 volts is only on the neutral which is isolated from the grounding system. Nothing happens to it, it is just a side effect of the resistance of the neutral. Its the same reason you may only get 117V from a power outlet whereas the supply is 125V -- it is lost as heat in wire resistance and this costs you some voltage. So now you're probably wondering why we ground things at all, since it is a parallel conductor that seems to always be around.
If we didn't ground our house main service equipment or the subpanel, then this voltage drop on a 3-wire feeder neutral wouldn't take a path through the earth. I believe most electrical systems would be safer (from a shock point of view) if they weren't grounded at all. But that would make them more susceptable to lightning and the degradation that causes.
Since the grid distribution system is grounded, it makes things safer for you and I to have our houses regrounded too. However, I can't think of a good example of why its bad to have the distribution grounded but not your house. Perhaps houses (structures) are grounded too solely for lightning protection, as the transformer earth ground is probably too far away to do you much good for lightning protection.
[ April 26, 2005, 04:47 PM: Message edited by: suemarkp ]