mivey
Senior Member
And your medium rare comment was dead on. If I wanted a chew toy, I could borrow one from my best friend.cschmid said:drag heck barbecue thick and juicy steaks and deliciously season ground steak..:grin:
And your medium rare comment was dead on. If I wanted a chew toy, I could borrow one from my best friend.cschmid said:drag heck barbecue thick and juicy steaks and deliciously season ground steak..:grin:
No question in my mind that OSHA requires it. No question that th NEC requires it - None - Zeroquogueelectric said:I had spoken out at one time that a transformer was centertapped and grounded to keep the voltages to ground at a safer level and was jumped on like a pack of wolves that this was untrue ... the book that it is referenced in is the OSHA Standards for the construction Industry (29 CFR PART 1926) With Amendments as of January 2006. ... This is an electrical safety requirement handed down from the federal government and it is also the law. ...
Like the art of war keep your friends close and your enemys closer. When things are grounded you know where it is coming from. If you understand theory correctly it is very safe. If you are a bumbling buffoon who doesnt clearly understand what it is you are working on you almost deserve it not that I wish any harm to anybodybut somewhere somehow someone must take accountability for thier actions. With the recent wave of OSHA awareness you couldnt get hurt if you tried yet who is going to pay for all of this?????coulter said:No question in my mind that OSHA requires it. No question that th NEC requires it - None - Zero
I only question that the grounding promotes any personel safety.
This isn't jumping on you - I absolutely agree the law requires the grounding as you, OSHA, and the NEC say.
I just can't find any science that particularly supports the grounding adds any safety.
carl
What is this ?? A kinder gentler Engineering crew??mivey said:And your medium rare comment was dead on. If I wanted a chew toy, I could borrow one from my best friend.
coulter said:I only question that the grounding promotes any personel safety.
medium rare vs well-done? A regular smorgasbord of near-death experiences...which one do I want, which one do I want?...last week was the finger-to-switchbox...humm, Hey Joe!, which one are you having?crossman said:...I am sure that person would prefer a 120v shock over a 240v shock...
Ground steak? Is that the one that got dropped?cschmid said:drag heck barbecue thick and juicy steaks and deliciously season ground steak..:grin:
Grounding any conductor would "stabilize" a system by fixing each conductor's voltage relative to earth. The only additional effect of opting for the neutral would be to minimize those voltage levels, again relative to earth.cschmid said:One could argue that the center tap increase safety but yet I believe it is really only a voltage stabilization method..
As I recall (that's code meaning I would have to look it up to be sure), several years ago (10?) The Norwegian system was top, followed by the Germans and then the French, US was below them. Don't know about now.cschmid said:...I wonder how the European electrical hazards safety statistics are compared to the United States statistics....
Not that I've ever heard. Preferred system is impedance grounded Wye for critical operations. (Lots of exceptions apply) But realize:cschmid said:...I believe the Delta transformer is a design standard use in critical operations due to the fact you can loose a winding and still use the transformer at full voltage.. ...
Are you sure of that. I thought the price of an xfm pretty much went by the pounds of copper and the pounds of steel core - and those are pretty dependent on the KVA. I have never heard that D was inherently more expensive than Y.cschmid said:...The Delta transformer costs much more money than a Y transformer and the POCO charges more for it use. ...
Really - I didn't know that.cschmid said:...Grounding makes it appear more safe ...
They require an alternate path, which you would normally expect to be the ground.LarryFine said:...Plus, GFCI devices require a system ground to function...
I mean the supply must be a grounded system. If the supply system has no grounded conductor, a line-to-earth pathway through a person would not be a hazard nor trip a GFCI.mivey said:They require an alternate path, which you would normally expect to be the ground.
Wouldn't a line-to-neutral pathway give you the same result (neutral from a different outlet). Or line-to-line for that matter. You might could picture that in an old home with 2-wire romex that has had some GFCI receptacles installed.LarryFine said:I mean the supply must be a grounded system. If the supply system has no grounded conductor, a line-to-earth pathway through a person would not be a hazard nor trip a GFCI.