K8MHZ
Senior Member
- Occupation
- Electrician
Perhaps the part I bonded to the screw driver was the metal light on top of the pole and the conductors coming down it.
Do you really think I would try to bond a wooden pole?
:roll:
I wooden think so.
Perhaps the part I bonded to the screw driver was the metal light on top of the pole and the conductors coming down it.
Do you really think I would try to bond a wooden pole?
:roll:
wayne
Thanks for your clarification.
Don't you think on a moist wooden pole the shocking experience you described may be present and so bonding the wooden pole also makes sense?
wayne
Thanks for your clarification.
Don't you think on a moist wooden pole the shocking experience you described may be present and so bonding the wooden pole also makes sense?
It is a different issue.:roll:By that logic, should we bond the trees also so that children or hunters won't get a shock when they climb them?:lol:
That is way ceramic insulator supports are provided in addition for fixing the transmission lines even on wooden poles....... we would have problems with all poles
That is way ceramic insulator supports are provided in addition for fixing the transmission lines even on wooden poles.
There is playgroung and baskeball goal equipement located under power lines. I'm getting electrical charges from the metal of the playground equipment. There also is an electrical power distrubtion station located acroos the street from the playground. is it possible to have stray voltage in the ground or the power lines my problem. Is there anyway make the equipment safe.
Thanks Ken
Yet still, we don't bond wood poles.
 
				