Kingrex
Active member
You need to find a horizontal piece. Not the little vertical ones that wrap in a u.
He doesn't because I never took one, unless he had somebody else do it. I don't have the tools to do that. It's not really required as every service I put in will have a ufer ground
Is a Multimeter a reliable tool for testing ground rod resistance?
Or a Clamp Meter?
When the power company and the electrician did the grounds in my home they used a Megger DET4TCR and a Fluke 1625 Earth Resistance Meter. They got 8.99 ohms on a 24 ft connected rod, in Fla sand. , Resistance is futile
I learned along time ago, (62 years + ) that when living in the lightning capital of the US, grounding and power needs should be handled by professionals as they are bonded, insured and most importantly trained.
Ouch, thats about $3500 for a Fluke or $2500 for the DET4TCR. Did they use 2 tools for separate test or were they used together? My inspector had something like the DET4TCR. That was all he brought.
In Seattle, all new construction has to have a concrete encased electrode. We are also in a very low lightning zone. That is a big reason I have never bought such a tool, nor have I used one on any commercial job. We very often megged gear on commercial jobs. We always did when installing any service equipment. Every feeder to every panel was megged. Every buss was not only megged but a huge power soak was hooked up to the end of the buss and we took a infrared temperature laser and checked every bolt. Every year or 2 a tech goes back and temperature checks all the buss.
On one data center I put in a few hundred feet of busway. We megged it and started the gear. All was fine. A week later they added a UPS and someone else added a T into the busway, hooked up the gear and threw the power switch. The whole busway blew apart at the T as the guy did not meg it and he had somehow crushed the phase plate against the ground so it blew up. Took out some UPS too. Glad I had nothing to do with that.
If you could get enough people to pool together money and find a used one???
I just don't need one. For the most part I'm winding down my work too. I'm getting too old to do it and good help is hard to find leaving me involved in too much physical labor.
I just let the power company/electricians handle this stuff. If something screws up they are liable. I'm just waiting to read online one day that some Audiophile got electrocuted or his home caught fire from messing around with his electrical system (unless he was a licensed electrician of course) , I learned along time ago to respect power and water. And I just hate plumbing.![]()
After 4 hours of digging, pounding, cursing and drilling I believe the rebar has been uncovered.:dancered:
View attachment 25348Af
After 4 hours of digging, pounding, cursing and drilling I believe the rebar has been uncovered.:dancered:
View attachment 25348Af