I appreciate the great advice. Just ordered the Rex Cauldwell book.
Good point, Dan about grounding the water system vs grounding to the water system. I wonder what differences appear with those new nonmetallic water systems in terms of grounding. (I have regular copper, but just wondering aloud)
I am considering a circuit with a separate ground for my computer equipment (I have lots of computer equipment). It would just be 1 or 2 outlets (with the special orange face type with the triangle) in the office for the computers to be as isolated as possible from other circuits.
I also have a weather station on my roof with a rather large metal pole, which I want to ground in case of lightning. I got a 6' copper spike and some solid copper wire (can't remember the gauge) just to give a strike something other than the house to go through. Thanks for the advice on getting that spike into the ground, Rob. (I was just going to slam it into the ground with my post hammer and expected to have about 10lbs of copper to recycle the next day...) I've had lightning strike my house before, and go through the coax line of the cable and take out just about all of my a/v gear, and give me a good jolt all the way through the Playstation controller I had in my hand at that moment (mostly just induction at that point, but it sure hurt!). Luckily I had physically disconnected all my computer equipment minutes before or I would have maxed out my renter's insurance at the time.
Good point, Dan about grounding the water system vs grounding to the water system. I wonder what differences appear with those new nonmetallic water systems in terms of grounding. (I have regular copper, but just wondering aloud)
I am considering a circuit with a separate ground for my computer equipment (I have lots of computer equipment). It would just be 1 or 2 outlets (with the special orange face type with the triangle) in the office for the computers to be as isolated as possible from other circuits.
I also have a weather station on my roof with a rather large metal pole, which I want to ground in case of lightning. I got a 6' copper spike and some solid copper wire (can't remember the gauge) just to give a strike something other than the house to go through. Thanks for the advice on getting that spike into the ground, Rob. (I was just going to slam it into the ground with my post hammer and expected to have about 10lbs of copper to recycle the next day...) I've had lightning strike my house before, and go through the coax line of the cable and take out just about all of my a/v gear, and give me a good jolt all the way through the Playstation controller I had in my hand at that moment (mostly just induction at that point, but it sure hurt!). Luckily I had physically disconnected all my computer equipment minutes before or I would have maxed out my renter's insurance at the time.