(05-25-2022, 02:45 PM)Roly Wrote: Being wet lowers the electrical resistance of the skin which allows more current to flow which is what you feel. Also the area of contact is much greater if you are in water which also lowers your bodies resistance which increase current. This is where you get into equipotenial grounding where everything is the same potential even if it is not zero. If everything is the same you do not notice any voltage, like a bird on the wire. Roly
Roly, so speaking of pools, interested your thoughts. I've been working through my own pool at my new house trying to understand what was done with the goal being to replace the gas heater with a heat pump. I've completed all wiring (supply and ground, all insulated #6 copper) for the heat pump and am confident with all that, but then came to a stopping point as I see no appropriate place to connect the chassis bonding lug to.
I'll preface to say I believe I have a decent grasp now on the difference between equipotential bonding and grounding. Grounding being the failsafe for a failed neutral or other fault condition to get current back to the source with low resistance/trip breakers, and the equipotential bonding to bring the water and all related/nearby metal components and deck to the same potential. (the whole "bird on a wire" concept).. Correct me if I'm wrong, but these two systems (equipotential bonding grid, and electrical ground) should not be connected to each other, right? Otherwise couldn't some fault deliver voltage into the water or to the ladder etc?
The pool is at least 30 years old (I've reached out to the town to find out exactly how old and hopefully who built it).. It's inground, surrounded by concrete. The pool itself isn't Gunite or concrete, nor is it a vinyl liner pool. So I'm assuming it's fiberglass. It has plastic coping but metal ladder and handles embedded in metal cups and an underwater light in the shell with a metal ring.
The gas pool heater's chassis bonding lug is connected to a piece of #8 stranded, insulated copper which disappeared into the ground in a thin metal pipe sticking up out of the concrete. Just this single wire into the concrete. I was assuming this connected to the bonding grid around the pool and had planned to use #8 bare copper between the new heat pump chassis and this point. I wanted to test that assumption first.
So I used my multi-meter to test resistance/continuity between various components and this single copper wire that disappeared into the concrete. I used one half of a 150' extension cord to make a very long lead for the meter.
I showed infinite resistance (no continuity) between this point and any of the metal cups for the handles and ladder as well as the water and wet concrete deck. But I did show continuity between this point and the underwater metal light ring as well as to the above-ground metal junction box that feeds the light niche..
hmm..
So then out of curiosity, I tested between this point and the grounding bus on the main panel, and ground pins on various accessible outlets around the house. All showed continuity and near zero resistance.
Apparently this lonesome piece of copper wire disappearing into the concrete floor is obviously not attached to an equipotential bonding grid, it's attached to the main electrical system's ground... somewhere...
So the chassis of the gas heater, while it looks like it's bonded, seems to be just grounded to everything else in the house. There is nothing connected to the bonding lug on the pool pump motor. Both pieces of equipment have dedicated, insulated, EGC's alongside their supply lines and it's all more than 5' from the pool.
Anyway, long story short, in looking for any evidence of equipotential bonding I see none. Everything is grounded, but there doesn't look to be any equipotential bonding system and this setup has apparently been safe for decades.
I worry that if I were to bring in an inspector, they'd say "you're adding a new heater, it must be bonded to the equipotential bonding grid, but there is none, so you must tear up all your concrete and replace it to include one and you're not allowed to use the pool until this happens.." That would simply not be feasible (maybe this fear is irrational).
The heat pump is wired with two hots and a dedicated EGC. With nothing attached to its bonding lug, I show continuity between the bonding lug and ground, which I hadn't quite expected if ground and bonding should be isolated from each other. The heat pump must internally already ground its chassis. So it almost seems like, in the absence of an equipotential bonding grid, the heat pump's bonding lug should simply remain empty. But if it were present, wouldn't this inherently tie together the bonding grid and the main electrical systems ground? After all, the old heater's bonding lug was grounded to the main electrical system, and the new heat pump's lug is at this point as well, even with nothing connected to it.
Does any of this make sense? I've permanently disconnected power to the light niche because it was tripping the breaker. If and when I replace it I'll use a transformer and a 24v light and I also plan to replace the metal ladder and handle with non-metallic versions.
Love to hear your thoughts!