- Location
- Windsor, CO NEC: 2017
- Occupation
- Hospital Master Electrician
I have been working in wineries lately. CA central coast wineries are growing exponentially. I have been hooking up new fermentation tanks. The only power on the stainless steel tanks is 24 VAC for the refrigeration control system. I bond the tank with the drain wire from the 18/2 which feeds the temperature control module. It seems to me that these huge steel tanks should have serious bond wires. They have no bond wires at all. Before I connected any of my wires, I metered from each tank to a hot wire on my drop light. My Fluke always registered 115+ volts to ground. The only ground I could see was the six legs touching the concrete. When I performed the test, the concrete floor was wet. They were pumping wine out of existing tanks and hosing down the floors.The following was originally posted by sparky_magoo in another thread:
Is contact with the concrete floor an adequate bond? Why did my Fluke register 115 VAC ?
In order to pump wine in or out of the tanks, we use cord connected 480 VAC motors mounted on four wheel carriages which resemble push mowers. If one of these hoses connected to the fermentation tanks had a fault, couldn't someone fry. Yes the hoses are non-metallic, but couldn't the tank somehow become energized? We do work in most of the wineries around here and they are all the same.