usmcgrover
Member
I have a strange issue here with a grounding electrode.
We have installed a room for an electronics lab. The walls and ceiling of the room were covered in steel mesh before the sheet rock was installed. The lab guys want us to install a copper pipe all the way around the perimeter of the room at the floor to attach "grounds" to. The stated intent of this system is to absorb RF energy for an "RF clean environment" (I wonder if I should mention the electronic ballasts in the light fixtures...)
Anyway, the issue I have with all of this is the way they want to install the grounding electrode for this system. They want the grounding electrode to be installed independently of the rest of the grounding system for the building. I told them that any grounding electrode that is present is required by the NEC to be bonded to the rest of the grounding electrode system per 250.50. They insist that the building steel is too "noisy" for their purposes.
Has anyone else encountered such a situation? I'd appreciate your comments.
Jeff
We have installed a room for an electronics lab. The walls and ceiling of the room were covered in steel mesh before the sheet rock was installed. The lab guys want us to install a copper pipe all the way around the perimeter of the room at the floor to attach "grounds" to. The stated intent of this system is to absorb RF energy for an "RF clean environment" (I wonder if I should mention the electronic ballasts in the light fixtures...)
Anyway, the issue I have with all of this is the way they want to install the grounding electrode for this system. They want the grounding electrode to be installed independently of the rest of the grounding system for the building. I told them that any grounding electrode that is present is required by the NEC to be bonded to the rest of the grounding electrode system per 250.50. They insist that the building steel is too "noisy" for their purposes.
Has anyone else encountered such a situation? I'd appreciate your comments.
Jeff