Posted on 03/19/2013 1:01:54 PM PDT by BenLurkin
Right after I moved into my new house I happened to be turning off my outside faucet barefoot while standing in a puddle that formed under the leaky hose.
Got one hell of a shock, called and complained to the electrician and he swears the system was fine when he did the work, ends up my electronic air cleaner on my furnace was all messed up they said.
I pounded a 20’ copper rod in the ground and ran a line to the water line just because anyway.
use WiFi, but she didn't believe me.
ok that makes sense
but my question remains- isn’t the problem more in the wiring in her house?
I bet it is a great place to find worms after a rain
Not in this case.
Mystery at Topaz substation
http://www.easyreadernews.com/35687/edison-stray-voltage/
...Brett Lacy of Web Electric in Redondo Beach. Lacy used a voltmeter and confirmed that the shower head was carrying a charge of about three volts. Perhaps even more disturbing, he checked the gas line outside the house and found an 12 volt charge.
Lacy turned off the homes main breaker, and the voltage readings remained the same. He realized then the problem had nothing to do with the house itself. The earth under and around the home was carrying a charge.
Also note, that eventually, they made repairs to the substation and modified the gas piping in the area.
Redondo Beach Residents Still Concerned About Stray Voltage
http://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2012/10/15/redondo-beach-residents-still-concerned-about-stray-voltage/
...
On Monday, crews from Southern California Edison, The Gas Company, and a corrosion control company out of Gardena worked in and around the Topaz Substation, which sits next to the Knob Hill neighborhood.
...
Edison said workers were installing a new grounding system at the substation, while The Gas Company said its replacing 3,000 feet of an 8-inch diameter steel gas line with 8-inch diameter plastic pipe.
Good Lord, don’t these morons have any idea what the word “electrocution” means?
Remember about twenty five years ago when “stray voltage” became a worry? Lots of con artists started plying the trade of claiming to “find” safe places in your home to put your child.
Others claimed that you could be hurt or killed by being under a high voltage power line.
Bunk.
A few years after this, a local man bought and sub divided an area right under a main power line running from the local power plant. He even made the power line service road the main street of this sub division.
There have been NO complaints from anyone living under those power lines. Ever!
You are confusing stray voltage with EMF fields.
But then, so are some of the people in the article.
Regardless of the EMF talk, this home and others in the area had measurable voltage on the water piping and the gas line piping, even after shutting off the main breaker to the house.
Not junk science at all. Stray voltage is real and it can cause problems.
I was on a 4 week jury trial several years ago where a local farmer was suing the power utility for the damage stray voltage was doing to his milk production.
It's as simple as this: All electricity generated and sent out the wire must come back to the generation point. How much of that returns via the neutral vs through the earth depends primarily on the condition of the neutral. Electricity ALWAYS follows the path of least resistance. In the testimony I heard, the utility itself indicated that something like 12% returned on the neutral, which meant that 88% returned through the earth. It;s been a long time and those numbers are probably not exact, but I was shocked (no pun intended) how much current was going through the earth. If the conditions are right, the path could indeed be down the metal of a water line which could indeed cause you issues if you became part of that circuit.
It's simple really.
I have a circuit tester (the one with the little light bulb) that showed me I had a “HOT” line with the power off.
I later found that if I took a short piece of copper conduit and touched one end to the tester, the other end to the other wire on the tester, I still got a dim “hot” light even though there was no connection to anything electrical anywhere.
I still can’t figure that one out.
Others claimed that you could be hurt or killed by being under a high voltage power line.
I think this is only a problem when there are other serious issues with the power lines. In my experience High Voltage lines make nice lightning rods.
Good post, but to clarify this statement. Electrical current flow will follow ALL paths, it will be in reverse proportion to the resistance.
too bad she didn’t plug into the ground and tap that power!
Its real. Maybe you should look it up before discounting it.
That reminds me of the famous problem: To find the resistance between opposite corners of a cube whose edges have a constant resistance. No pens, pencils, computers or calculators!
Hmmm, now how did that go?
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