Quote:
Originally Posted by rattus View Post
.The GEC is meant to protect against electric shock.
How? Aside from tripping the breaker.
First off, I was talking about the EGC, not the GEC--my first mistake of the year.
Ohmic or capacitive leakage in a washing machine for example can make the cabinet hot unless an EGC is connected. You know that.
Quote:
Originally Posted by rattus View Post
With metal cased appliances and power tools, it is possible to get a tingle or even a lethal shock due to leakage between the hot line and the metal case.
That's why I say that an EGC protects wiring but endangers people.
Don't see that at all.
Quote:
Originally Posted by rattus View Post
.The GEC shunts this current to the neutral/ground bus. If a fault occurs, then this shunted current will be enough to trip the breaker.
Not if the fault is a human.
Faults are inhuman, or is it inhumane?
Originally Posted by rattus View Post
.The GEC is meant to protect against electric shock.
How? Aside from tripping the breaker.
First off, I was talking about the EGC, not the GEC--my first mistake of the year.
Ohmic or capacitive leakage in a washing machine for example can make the cabinet hot unless an EGC is connected. You know that.
Quote:
Originally Posted by rattus View Post
With metal cased appliances and power tools, it is possible to get a tingle or even a lethal shock due to leakage between the hot line and the metal case.
That's why I say that an EGC protects wiring but endangers people.
Don't see that at all.
Quote:
Originally Posted by rattus View Post
.The GEC shunts this current to the neutral/ground bus. If a fault occurs, then this shunted current will be enough to trip the breaker.
Not if the fault is a human.
Faults are inhuman, or is it inhumane?