On 10/18/2019 4:14 PM,
et...@whidbey.com wrote:
> On Fri, 18 Oct 2019 12:41:25 -0400, Bob Engelhardt
> <
BobEng...@comcast.net> wrote:
>
>> On 10/18/2019 11:25 AM,
et...@whidbey.com wrote:
>>> The top wire is 17,000 volts. The lower is the neutral. Both are tied
>>> to a transformer that feeds my house and one across the street. The
>>> neutral is also tied to a ground at the pole. There is at least one
>>> pole before mine that has a wire going to ground from the neutral. And
>>> yes, I did have 220 while the neutral wire was down.
>>
>> That's pretty scary, actually. If the ground at the pole was broken, or
>> marginal, the primary would be grounded by your & your neighbor's
>> service ground rods. I.e., your service would be part of the 17,000
>> volt circuit. In the very worst case, if your grounds were broken, you
>> would have 17,000 volts on your houses' circuits, just waiting for a
>> path to ground.
>>
>> ----- 17,000 -----) (----- 240 ----
>> ) (___.________ Neutral _____
>> ) ( | |
>> X Neutral --+-) (---|--240 ---- |
>> |________| Gnd
>> |
>> Gnd
>>
>>
>>> I am amazed that the ground could work so well. Maybe it's because the
>>> ground here is so wet.
>>> Eric