Why is earth grounding important ?

And this actually makes the case for how little the resistance of the grounding electrode system really matters. Many places of the country have lots of ungrounded Delta distribution. Most rural areas in upstate New York where I live are this way.
Interesting its here also but considered 'legacy' do they keep the ungrounded delta on upgrades?
So a building served from these won't have the massive MGN grounded in a zillion places. Instead they will just have an earth connection at the pole, with a good chance that has been cut off and stolen by thieves. That leaves the electrodes at the building as the only Earth connection. My point is I have never noticed an increase in surges, damaged equipment, less reliable operation, or anything negative whatsoever on these systems compared to one served by an MGM with its super low resistance ground.
I wonder if thats because of that big court case on Electrical Trespass or "Stray Voltage" from a what I think was a MGN system in NY. However I might have that backwards it may have been a delta system.
Some homeowners had high levels of stray voltage around a substation after it was 'upgraded' back around 2012 they sued.
I think they (the plaintiffs) proved the Utility (NYSEG) was aware the (MGN?) system caused stray voltage.
The utility tried to fix it by installing the fancy 'Ronk voltage blockers' etc.
Basically a utility is liable for 'Inverse Condemnation' when their (neutral) current leaks across a property causing a 'loss' as then you cant enjoy your new pool or your dog gets shocked etc. Even if a utility has an easement for electrical wires, they need a different easement for using the earth as a conductor. There have been recent successful suits that utility easements for electrical wires dont cover 'fiber optic', due to the exact wording of utility easements, though some may allow SWER or MGN explicitly.
I cant remember the outcome of the case but I remember it was in NY and it cost the utility millions just in legal fees, was big enough that other utilities started reconsidering upgrading to that system as 'risky'.
There have been other cases around dairy cows and pools.
 
Utilities learned early on to ground their distribution lines otherwise huge arcs would erupt from their generators at the central station. There are reports of generator mechanics getting hit by large arcs just standing nearby. Apparently the voltage gradient over miles of transmission line is huge.

I bet that grounding at the service was required by the utility just due to them being paranoid about previous insufficient grounding.
 
Utilities learned early on to ground their distribution lines otherwise huge arcs would erupt from their generators at the central station. There are reports of generator mechanics getting hit by large arcs just standing nearby. Apparently the voltage gradient over miles of transmission line is huge.

I bet that grounding at the service was required by the utility just due to them being paranoid about previous insufficient grounding.
Hmmm, that sounds like BS. For one thing there are transformers between the generators and the transmission lines, and then again between the transmission lines and distribution lines. So I don't see how the grounding topology in one "section" would effect the other. I guess I would want some more specifics on exactly which conductors are/were getting these voltage gradients and arcs. Like I said, lots of ungrounded Delta distributions still out there, geographically most of New York State. never heard of problems.
 
Interesting its here also but considered 'legacy' do they keep the ungrounded delta on upgrades?
.

The common scheme they use for upgrading, is to just upgrade the first 1/4 to 1/3 of the line (total guess, just making a point) to 13.2/7.62 KV WYE, and at the end of that hit a transformer platform that refeeds the older 4800 Delta lines. Once you start looking, you see these transformer platforms everywhere.
 
Hmmm, that sounds like BS. For one thing there are transformers between the generators and the transmission lines, and then again between the transmission lines and distribution lines. So I don't see how the grounding topology in one "section" would effect the other. I guess I would want some more specifics on exactly which conductors are/were getting these voltage gradients and arcs. Like I said, lots of ungrounded Delta distributions still out there, geographically most of New York State. never heard of problems.
Maybe, but it is the explanation given by my 1917 Hawkins Electrical Guide.
 
voltage to dump directly to the earth, where the lightning wanted to go anyway.

lol

a big NEGATIVE opposite effect at my son's house a few years ago, having a good ground (ufer) on the house CAUSED a lot of damage
direct lightning strike to 150 ft DFir tree 10 ft from house, big lightning gash in tree down to the roof level of the house, then lightning jumped to the grounded floodlight at the eave - blew the computers and the inverter in the heat pump, NO gash in the tree bark from huse eave level to ground, lightning jumped TO the house vs. continuing down the tree to ground!

An UNGROUNDED house would have had less equipment damage.
I have seen somewhat opposite issue with lightning before. Is a little hard to predict what will be the less resistance path or what gap may be jumped in a lightning event.

Got called to a kitchen fire many years ago that started after a lightning event. Supposedly lightning struck a pole nearby, and entered house via the electric service. This house had no grounding electrode connected to electric service. The fire started behind the range, we figured there was likely an arc between a range receptacle and a gas pipe behind the range that started the fire. Would've an electrode at the service prevented that fire? Maybe, still hard to tell for certain.
 
One of the "reasons" for grounding systems is supposedly static. Anyone experience real life situations where static build-up is an issue? I'm thinking that would most likely occur in arid and windy locations. Anecdotally, I heard that this was one of the issues the Army faced in the desert which directly resulted in the "invention" of the CEE by Mr. Ufer himself. Something about ammunition storage. Yeah, I could see why you might not want static discharges in ammunition storage buildings.
Satellite dish installers are fairly adamant about a grounding connection to the shield of their cables, though most of them obviously don't look at it same way electricians do when it comes to how/where they connect it. Electricians want it bonded to electric system, some simply because that is what code says but don't necessarily know why. The dish installer is doing it in his mind to minimize static buildup caused by the wind blowing past the dish.
 
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