ECN Electrical Forum - Discussion Forums for Electricians, Inspectors and Related Professionals
ECN Shout Chat
ShoutChat
Recent Posts
Do we need grounding?
by gfretwell - 04/06/24 08:32 PM
UL 508A SPACING
by tortuga - 03/30/24 07:39 PM
Increasing demand factors in residential
by tortuga - 03/28/24 05:57 PM
Portable generator question
by Steve Miller - 03/19/24 08:50 PM
New in the Gallery:
This is a new one
This is a new one
by timmp, September 24
Few pics I found
Few pics I found
by timmp, August 15
Who's Online Now
1 members (Scott35), 361 guests, and 11 robots.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Previous Thread
Next Thread
Print Thread
Rate Thread
#164008 05/22/07 11:22 PM
Joined: Dec 2004
Posts: 78
C
Cinner Offline OP
Member
Can you ground a transformer to a steel column of a steel building or do you have to run the ground wire to a system ground?

Joined: Dec 2001
Posts: 444
S
Member
Ontario code allows it, provided the steel building is bonded at two separate points to ground using the same size ground wire as the main service.

This is a very handy practice, say, in a machine shop that use a separate transformer for each piece of equipment.

Joined: Jun 2006
Posts: 613
M
Member
My quick answer is no. there are circumstances where i would allow it but only if it can be easily proven that the building steel is continuous and solidly connected to the grounding system and electrodes. 10-700 mentions in-situ electrodes and defines what that might be. In buildings where the engineering required the steel to be bonded in 2 widely seperated places (very old code for High voltage substation grounding) and was made continuous via bonding jumpers, welding, or mechanical joints proven to be electrically continuous then we might allow the column to be part of the system ground. A lot of homework to do in an old building but might be simple to establish when the power distributution is planned and the bonding and grounding is included in the inspections of the building. The long answer is maybe.


Link Copied to Clipboard
Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 7.7.5