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"The alloys in the pipe would probably not have these elemental values but should be fairly close. I expect the steel conduit to be reasonably close to the iron value as well. So, a short run of lead to the soil is probably a lot lower in electrical resistance than the much longer run through the conduit." The above is true but I think we need to look back to the classic definition of earth ground which is a copper rod 1,000 ft long inserted straight down into the earth. Theoretically this allows any am ...
To the best of my knowledge here in the states that is generally not an issue. However I really do wonder how things work in a high rise building. Are there any electricians out there who have experience in this area?
When I had a distributor in Taiwan he would ground the equipment to the widow sill. This sounds silly at first except that in Taiwan there is very little of the typical woodframe construction we find here in the States and most folks live in high rise buildings. According to him at the time he was doing it he claimed it worked just fine. My guess is that the entire frame of the high rise building was tied to earth ground.
I loved the story about the water pumps.
Well, I have to console myself with SOMETHING, right?