borjis
LifeTime Supporter
Often when turning off breakers the bonding issue is not resolved.
Exactly. Either a neighbor has a subpanel with the main bonding jumper installed, or a utility transformer is starting to fail and current is going to ground. Another possibility is a damaged underground service lateral.Right, but wouldn't that point to leaking voltage from another location other than the house?
Exactly. Either a neighbor has a subpanel with the main bonding jumper installed, or a utility transformer is starting to fail and current is going to ground. Another possibility is a damaged underground service lateral.
You are ignoring to some extent that a properly bonded pool will prevent this shock from happening even if the source is not in your house.
Solve the bonding issue and the shock will go away.
You are ignoring to some extent that a properly bonded pool will prevent this shock from happening even if the source is not in your house.
Solve the bonding issue and the shock will go away.
So, It's not looking like I will have any luck with electricians. Should I just rent a concrete saw and cut a trench all the way around my pool, and bury a wire connecting everything metal?
But I do have the question on bonding the concrete of whether it has to have rebar to attach the bond wire too or is that the same as laying the mesh down, bonding to it, then pouring concrete on top of that ?
I don't think electrically it makes a difference.
You going to use something like this - https://www.erico.com/catalog/literature/E673B.pdf ?
Is this an issue?? See the light coming from around the housing? Shouldn’t that be a tight seal?
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