ptonsparky
Tom
- Occupation
 - EC - retired
 
Yes, take their money!Drive a new ground rod and connect it to to the GEC connection point in the main panel. You can prove that the new one is there. Some things are not worth fighting over.
Yes, take their money!Drive a new ground rod and connect it to to the GEC connection point in the main panel. You can prove that the new one is there. Some things are not worth fighting over.
This is a home inspector. If I were the seller, I’d point him to the final inspection approval sticker on the panel and tell him to pound sand. It’s unlikely that the buyers will push the issue unless they got cold feet regarding the purchase for some other reason.250.53 indicates for for a single rod it must be supplemented by another unless you can prove 25 ohm or less.
If this is a home inspector that is making a fuss take with a grain of salt as an original historical installation it would have been inspected before the power was turned on by the POCO. If a purchase agreement was being held up all code requires is a second rod at least six feet from the first. Anywhere accessible beyond that meet the code and just drive one and done.
If this is an electrical inspector AHJ then either proof of resistance or proof of electrode would be required.
Who pays?If the ground rod is hidden, an electrician can perform a ground resistance test to confirm it’s installed and working properly. You could also check the electrical panel for grounding connections or ask for installation records.
The fact that there is a “Pass” sticker in the panel from the electrical inspector is the installation record.… ask for installation records.
For us, in NE, we only saw stickers for a few years, then stamped permit inspection cards and last a mailed 'passed' notice. I never took those back to the location. Some could have been months after completion.The fact that there is a “Pass” sticker in the panel from the electrical inspector is the installation record.
Even if one was to prove yes there is a ground rod but wish that I had a dollar for every one that got cut In halve. I once spent 6 hours hours years ago attempting to drill a hole thru 18" of concrete with numerous heavy rebar. I drilled down 16" and got a 3/4" hammer drill bit stuck that I could not twist out with a 24" pipe wrench. Had to leave that in the concrete and have somebody burn producing part flush with the floor. It was in a big city with no grass on the property. Needless to say that was when you only had to have one ground rod and that one had to be cut. Place was built to park loaded tractor trailers and they went overboard on the concrete thinking they were going to add a second floor. Only load where luminares and one receptacle.Is there a way to prove that there is a ground rod to the home inspector, even though it is not visible outside and covered with concrete?
Thank you
				