shop-talk
[Top] [All Lists]

Grounds and neutrals

To: shop-talk@autox.team.net
Subject: Grounds and neutrals
From: Gt6steve@aol.com
Date: Fri, 29 Apr 2005 15:32:48 EDT
Hi Ron,
The concept you're pondering is one that's confusing to every apprentice we  
instruct.  Yes, it is electrically the same.  Function is the  difference.  
The neutral wire is a current carrying conductor by  intent.  The ground or 
earth wire is a safety path to ensure all framework  is at the same electrical 
potential.
 
A corollary to your premise would ask why a seaman in a boatswains chair  
would have a safety lanyard??  Just hang him over the side with the same  rope, 
right? ;-))

I have never  really understood the mania on this third wire or "Ground" wire
in the US  since 99.9% of all electrical panels have the supposedly "Neutral"
wire and  the "ground" wire connect to the same buss.  In the UK where all
the  two wire plugs are actually both hot (two phases of 120) 220 volt -  it
makes good since to have a separate ground wire - but in the US each  outlet
already has a ground wire, I don't see the reason you need two -  It's even
sillier now on the 220 appliances because you now have to have 4  wires
instead of three - 2, 120 wires and 1 ground and now lets add another  ground
wire.

Just hook up a wire form the ground screw on the back  of the outlet to the
neutral (white side) on the back of the plug - and you  have the exact same
circuit as if you had hooked the ground wire to the  white wire at the panel.
Stick in one of those fancy three light testers  and you'll see what I mean.


Ron (closet electrician)  Schmittou






<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>
  • Grounds and neutrals, Gt6steve <=