hurk27
Senior Member
- Location
- Portage, Indiana NEC: 2008
What about the unintentional connection of the work lead to the ground through the grill work which was fixed to the ground and on which the welder was doing his work?
What your not understanding is the output leads of a welder have no reference to ground, Earth, or any other item that servers in place of ground, welding on a piece of metal sitting on ground will still not cause current to try to flow back to the welder machine.
The secret to welding without getting shocked is isolation, many use mats to stand on, all use gloves, but the important thing to not damage other electrical systems is to not use the building as part of the current paths as I posted about before, bonding the welder work lead creates a reference to Earth that would not normally be there, this is a mistake that many welders do thinking the current wants to return to Earth, they think doing this will remove the shock hazard, this is a myth that many non-electricians do not understand and even some electricians that still think this way, by not grounding the work lead you have a much less reference area located only in the area of the work being welded, if the items that are being welded are also bonded to a grounding system then care must be taken to put the work lead as close to where the work being done is, and care must be taken by the operator doing the work to not get between the metal that is grounded and his stinger lead, the fact that the work is grounded has no effect on the safety of the operator other then he better be waring shoes that provide electrical isolation from the ground he is standing on, remember we are not talking about very high voltage, most OCV is barely over 100 volts, so most shoes would provide isolation from this voltage with no problems.
The operator who sweats allot should also put a isolation mat down, but what about high steel welders, in most cases they are sitting right on the beams they are welding, again they must take care to keep themselves isolated from the stinger lead, watch for frayed cables is a must, and when inserting and or removing a welding rod in the stinger, they should have a dry pair of gloves on.