Again, yes, and for the same reasons.Are they necessary when connecting the ground wires together? I can see why for CCC.
If you understand why it is necessary for CCC then you should see why for the egc. Loosing a ground is more dangerous then loosing the CCC. Safety here not functionality-- the egc is very important to be kept in tact.Are they necessary when connecting the ground wires together? I can see why for CCC. Thank you for your help.
Are they necessary when connecting the ground wires together? I can see why for CCC. Thank you for your help.
why can you run a bare copper wire to the ground rod?
Because one does not have to worry about the resistance buildup due to corrosion within the splice, as the GEC is not permitted to be spliced, unless it is of an irreversible type.
what resistance buildup this is not a current carrying conductor? why would just the splice corrode?
Brass and bronze will last much, much longer in the ground than even galvanized (zinc-coated) steel will.So you can use rmc in the ground correct? You can use the conduit as a grd. correct? So should you coat the whole pipe in silicone? I'm not tryin to be a smart a#%. I'm just trying to understand. What about a grd clamp direct buried? Should that connection be dipped in silicone?
Brass and bronze will last much, much longer in the ground than even galvanized (zinc-coated) steel will.
I was thinking at least 15 minutes longer. :grin:Is that measured in hours, days, weeks, months or possibly longer?