If my ground is a lie (IE: not connected) then i shouldn't measure anything from hot/neut to ground It sounds as though we have similar issues though. I tend to replace them with NEMAīall is just someone else with equally crap wiringĮadthem: No. I freaked out when i saw it and thought i had aluminumĮadthem: Some of them, yes. first floor is my room, another room, tiny bathroom, kitchen, and living roomĢnd floor and basement were both additions Just replaced two and there was only two wires.Įadthem, my big deal was the /measurable/ (6-8v) AC on my PC's ethernet jack. Like we even have ground wire in the outlets You have a neutral and a ground wire, even if the ground isnt properly grounded Sir_galahad_ad, i noticed when i got a "plesant" buzzing sensation from my desktop's ethernet drop in the basement. Note your only allowed to bond at the main panel Mokuba_K check your neutral ground bonding at the main panel Sir_galahad_ad: At the point of bonding, sure. Mokuba_K: normally it doesn't neutral to ground should be 0 when last i knew I need an explanation of how this is physically possible so i have an idea of WTF i'm looking forĪC outlet, standard 120v configuration - neutral to ground - 70v, hot to ground - 46v, neutral to hot - 122vīut how does that voltage split up like that?!?!
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