I’ve just had a new house built in Atlantic Canada. This morning I noticed a bit of a tingle from my coffee machine when I touched it with wet hands. The machine has a grounded (3 pin) plug and I checked - it has 0V between the parts I touched (the entire metal outer case) and the ground socket in the outlet. So, I got curious and did some more measurements. It turns out there is 20V AC (and about 300mV DC) between the ground in my outlets and me when I’m standing on my floor (sealed concrete slab) with bare feet.

I assume this isn’t good?

I’ll be calling the electrician that wired the house in the morning, but I’d appreciate any insights you might have.

  • ReallyZen@lemmy.ml
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    edit-2
    5 days ago

    Having gathered more info from your other replies, well, let’s say the same but quicker… you know the meme :

    'xcept here it’ll be GROUND ALL THE THINGS!

    The slab, the pipe, the Cat6 conduit, ground it all. If I was in my line of work, there’ll be a 6mm² ground wire between both houses.

    (Image credit Allie Brosh’ excellent “Hyperbole and a half”)

    • Great Blue HeronOP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      5 days ago

      The slab, the pipe, the Cat6 conduit, ground it all…

      The Cat6 is not in conduit - it’s direct burial rated cable. It was a bit of an afterthought - I already have a pair of Ubiquiti GigaBeams that are working very well. But, the trench was being dug for the water line so I jumped on Amazon and bought a cheap cable. I ran it my desk as a fly lead for a while to make sure it worked and then dropped it in the trench before it was back filled. If fixing my ground issues doesn’t fix the ethernet performance I’ll just go back to the GigaBeams.

      …If I was in my line of work, there’ll be a 6mm² ground wire between both houses.

      I might actually be able to achieve that - there’s a 4 wire “well pump wire” from my new house back to the well, which is very close to the old house. One of those wires might be a ground and if so, it might make sense to ground it at both ends. I’ll look into it.

      • ReallyZen@lemmy.ml
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        2
        ·
        5 days ago

        When I said 6mm² it’s because of the distance, you want more copper to get less resistivity between both grounds; your water pump probably run on 1.5 or 2.5² which isn’t much - but by all means, please ensure that pump is grounded!

        Also because IRL I run elec for open-air festivals & with great responsibility comes great paranoia ;)