New construction barndominium. Meter is not attached to building. Several yards away. 2 ground rods by the meter spaced 12 ft apart. Emergency disconnect mounted next to meter. #2 green copper ran from disconnect to 200 amp panel inside barndo.
Footings poured and wet set brackets used in some areas. Also permacolumns use in shop side of barndo. The house side is a separate pour from the garage side. Both floors will be poured after the footings and slabs are not attached to the footings via rebar. In fact separated by 2" foam on the interior perimeter of footings. The floors are clay earth, covered with compacted sand for leveling, covered with plastic vapor barrier and then covered with 2 inches of pink board foam. pex tubing screwed into foam for radiant heat. Then covered 4" of poured concrete as the finished floor. Basically inside a foam box 2 inches thick.
My question is ...do I need a UFER ground? And is the UFER used to "groud the concrete"? Or is the UFER used to ground the system? My understanding is the system is grounded by the two rods by the meter.
How can the concrete provide ground if not making contact with the earth? If not then the UFER is being used to ground the concrete? Why would I want to ground the finished floor?
Is that even theoretically possible? When changing a panel I have stood on a piece of OSB. How is the concrete any different if on top of plastic and 2 inch foam?
Any help would be appreciated.
Footings poured and wet set brackets used in some areas. Also permacolumns use in shop side of barndo. The house side is a separate pour from the garage side. Both floors will be poured after the footings and slabs are not attached to the footings via rebar. In fact separated by 2" foam on the interior perimeter of footings. The floors are clay earth, covered with compacted sand for leveling, covered with plastic vapor barrier and then covered with 2 inches of pink board foam. pex tubing screwed into foam for radiant heat. Then covered 4" of poured concrete as the finished floor. Basically inside a foam box 2 inches thick.
My question is ...do I need a UFER ground? And is the UFER used to "groud the concrete"? Or is the UFER used to ground the system? My understanding is the system is grounded by the two rods by the meter.
How can the concrete provide ground if not making contact with the earth? If not then the UFER is being used to ground the concrete? Why would I want to ground the finished floor?
Is that even theoretically possible? When changing a panel I have stood on a piece of OSB. How is the concrete any different if on top of plastic and 2 inch foam?
Any help would be appreciated.
