+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 8 of 8

Thread: What are the electrical concerns with SWG?

Hybrid View

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Posts
    4

    Default Re: What are the electrical concerns with SWG?

    What is the pupose of "bonding"?

    What are the dangers associated with an "unbounded" pool?

    My pool shed is located 30 feet from my pool. Does that decrease potential danger?

    Does SWG increase any potential dangers associated with an "unbounded" pool?

    My pool whas constructed 20 years ago. I really do not remember if all conductive materials were connected with a wire but I never had any problem in the past.
    Last edited by Denis54; 07-26-2006 at 09:45 PM.

  2. #2
    tenax is offline Registered+ Widget Weaver tenax 0
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Posts
    445

    Default Re: What are the electrical concerns with SWG?

    Denis, just doing some reading up on this, it appears the us electrical code insists you bond everything metal regardless of distance. in canada, the coding is somewhat difference. my pool stairs, light are bonded..nothing in my shed is. if the equipment were within 5 ft of the pool, it would have to be as well. but my shed is 30 ft plus away from the pool..which explains why nothing in my shed was which at first surprised me before i started reading up on this. in the canadian code, the rationale given is that i actually want the pool electrical items ISOLATED from the metal items at the pool rather than bonded to..which seems somewhat logical to me.oh well. in regards to ponding metal items around the pool, my understanding is that you can get a variety of shocks from minor to major..you want to get any potential electrical shocks to ground quickly. the #8 copper wire does that so the electricity doesn't travel to your body..i don't quite understand the difference between "grounding" and "bonding" but..can see the concern. read a story recently about a woman who had a pool and in certain areas of it, they would get a very mild shock. they believe it's due somehow to some power poles added behind their place recently and apparently other people with pools by them are getting some mild shocks as well.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    Indiana.
    Posts
    700

    Default Re: What are the electrical concerns with SWG?

    Quote Originally Posted by Denis54
    What is the pupose of "bonding"?

    What are the dangers associated with an "unbounded" pool?

    My pool shed is located 30 feet from my pool. Does that decrease potential danger?

    Does SWG increase any potential dangers associated with an "unbounded" pool?

    My pool whas constructed 20 years ago. I really do not remember if all conductive materials were connected with a wire but I never had any problem in the past.
    Bonding makes sure that all conductive materials that a swimmer might contact are at the same voltage. With electricity, it's not the voltage that hurts you, it is touching two points that are at different voltages which causes current to flow through your body.

    An example of what bonding can protect from:
    You place an AC powered radio on the concrete deck of the unbonded pool. Splashing around causes the deck and radio to become wet. Now the deck is at 115VAC. A swimmer starts to climb out of the pool with a hand on the metal ladder. They are electrocuted when they contact both the wet deck and the ladder at the same time. If the pool had been properly bonded, the rebar in the deck and the ladder would have been wired together, so the ladder and the deck (and even the water in the pool) would have both been at 115VAC, so no electrocution.

    Bonding probably most often benefits by preventing stray voltage related minor shocks when touching the deck or ladder.

    The big issue with bonding the pool equipment is that the pool itself will often/usually/sometimes/who knows be grounded by it's own contact with the earth, but often the water will be at an unknown voltage because it isn't in contact with anything conductive. If a fault occurs at the pump or heater etc., the water can become energized at a different voltage than the deck.

    All of these scenarios are pretty rare, and other safety equipment like GFCIs and common sense should be the first line of defense, but there are real world examples of people being killed by rare events in pools with unbonded equipment. One that impressed me was a lifeguard in contact with an improperly replaced lifeguard stand who was electrocuted when a trackhoe working nearby contacted a power line with its boom. No way could the pool operator have controlled what happened, and the voltage of the earth was raised to several thousand volts in the area.

    I would say that the long distance to the pool shed actually increases the danger, in that the earth in the area of the pool is more likely to be at a different voltage than that at the service entrance.

+ Reply to Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts