quogueelectric said:
I have been beating that drum for quite some time now yet I get mugged when I say current travels to ground. Judge for yourself One wire coming off the primary and a bare #6 down the pole to a rod.
No mugging from me. Just a gentle attitude adjustment
Current travels back to the source, via _all_ paths available to it.
The ground is a conductor. If the source is grounded, then current can flow back to the source via the ground.
If the source were not somewhere connected to the ground, then other than very small capacitive current flows, then the current wouldn't flow through the ground.
With most utility systems, the primary neutral and the secondary neutral share the same wires, and that common neutral wire is also grounded all over the place.
Since the ground is a conductor, this means that some fraction of the neutral current will flow through the parallel path represented by the ground. In these systems, current is clearly flowing into the ground...but it flows out of the ground someplace else, to balance this.
Finally, there are systems known as 'single wire earth return', where a single high voltage line is run out to a transformer, with no neutral return wire. The return is via a good grounding electrode (at both the source and the load transformer) and the earth acts as a conductor between the two. Again a case of significant current flow into (and out of) the earth, but the current is simply flowing through the earth as a conductor, not 'seeking' earth in any fashion.
-Jon