No, but the frame of a metal house must be grounded to an approved grounding electrode.
It is a frame structure because it is a frame structure.
Palatine German Frame House was created in 1760.
'Good' grounding, or earthing, has no effect whatsoever on electricity bills. Electricity bills are based on your property's energy consumption. Grounding is simply a safety feature of the electrical system; it draws no energy.
A balloon frame is a house frame constructed entirely of small timber.
it depends on where the neutral is lost if its loose on the street side of the meter or grounding electrode conductor one leg will have a higher voltage than the other but the grounding electrode conductor may be large enough to act as the neutral and remove all the phase imbalance this will show current in the ground on the load side everything will look normal if you have 4 identical lights 2 on each leg you will not detect any difference if you turn off one lamp the lamp on that leg will supply the current to the two on the other letting the single lamp see 160 v 50% brighter and the 2 in parallel on the other leg 80v 50% dimmer triplex wire the bare wire is the neutral and the messenger so if a furniture van pulls to the door an snags the cable. the neutral will break leaving about 6' of slack in the hots.( drip loops at the weather head) and they stay connected the grounding electrode conductor is likely connected to the water line and every house on the street is too so the voltage across the break will be less than 1v unless your phase loads are all on on leg which will mean on the order of 1V delta V= i^2*r (#2Al neutral)- i^2*r (#4cu grounding electrode conductor)
No. And this how grounding a child works.
YES
Become friends with both Magnemite and Magneton, and then Electrode will come to play.
You need a grounding system that follows the local electrical code.
A balloon frame is a house frame constructed entirely of small timber.
it goes to the house of approval
the president