What is the purpose of this grey pipe that runs down to the ground? There is nothing inside it, and it is open to the groundat the bottom. Is it a drain in case water gets in the box?
BenTheGoodAg said:
Unlikely to be a drain. The fitting creates a lip anyway, so any water would pool around it, but not going to be an issue in an outdoor rated panel. FWIW, drainage requirements depends on NEMA rating of the enclosure.
What is it? Depends on what the box is. Most likely a spare for some outdoor load, like outdoor lighting or sprinkler system, or could have been for a ground cable down to the ground rod.
It's really unlikely that you're grounded by your gas pipe. It's SOP to use a dielectric fitting between the meter and above-ground pipe to electrically isolate them. If the GEC is missing, there are likely other features that provide some reference grounding effect for your house in normal circumstances (capacitive grounding, grounding at the transformer, etc.).Thunderstruck xx said:
So it's possible that this whole time my home has only had a ground via the exposed gas pipe?
It could mean that. But it's not an absolute - different contractor, different day, etc. The other wire above looks like it might could go to an Ufer ground. Still think you're on the right track to ask them about it at this point.Thunderstruck xx said:
So I did some investigating of other houses in my neighborhood that are under construction. Those houses appear to have a thick bare wire running into the ground through that grey pipe on the bottom of the main panel. Seems like that should be the ground wire which I don't have.
Thunderstruck xx said:
would there be any harm in having both an ufer as well as a ground rod?