VALZ
Member
- Location
- New York, USA
Hello,
I have searched all over this site and the internet for this question to be put in lay-mans’ terms so I can explain it easier to other people. If anyone could help it would be greatly appreciated. The neutral is considered a current carrying conductor, check. Ideal neutral is 0V, check. The neutral is “almost always” bonded to earth. When the “hot” conductor goes through a resistance i.e. light bulb, and there is “extra” voltage that is not being used by R1, it returns safely on the neutral and is dissipated to earth etc…. The question is, if the voltage returns on the BONDED earth neutral why does it not go to a ground fault situation through R1 and back to shut the source breaker off. In other words; If you jump a wire hot to ground you get pop and glow. If the neutral is effectively seeing the same potential as the ground wire “at some point” why does it not pop and glow every time you connect any circuit.
Thank you all for any responses.
I have searched all over this site and the internet for this question to be put in lay-mans’ terms so I can explain it easier to other people. If anyone could help it would be greatly appreciated. The neutral is considered a current carrying conductor, check. Ideal neutral is 0V, check. The neutral is “almost always” bonded to earth. When the “hot” conductor goes through a resistance i.e. light bulb, and there is “extra” voltage that is not being used by R1, it returns safely on the neutral and is dissipated to earth etc…. The question is, if the voltage returns on the BONDED earth neutral why does it not go to a ground fault situation through R1 and back to shut the source breaker off. In other words; If you jump a wire hot to ground you get pop and glow. If the neutral is effectively seeing the same potential as the ground wire “at some point” why does it not pop and glow every time you connect any circuit.
Thank you all for any responses.