An electrical ground wire connects your home’s electrical panel and outlets, to a grounding rod which is buried in the ground outside your home. This “grounding” functions as a safety valve of sorts, allowing an alternate path for excess electrical current to flow (back to ground) in the event that there is an overload in the wiring system. Electrical current is attracted to the negative charge in the ground. The ground - "mother earth" - absorbs and dissipates any excess current.
The electricity you depend on to power devices and keep the lights on is supposed to stay within the metal circuit wires, the current returning to ground through the neutral wires. Sometimes, though, breakdowns occur along the way and the power flows outside the wires. When electricity flows outside the wires in favor of a more direct path to ground, it can be lethal to your devices or to anyone touching them.
Grounding wires are a built-in backup system that runs parallel to the hot (black) and neutral (white) wires as an escape route of sorts for excess power. There are a number of reasons why there might be too much electricity moving through your home’s system, from spikes moving through the municipal grid to lightning strikes. In the absence of adequate grounding, the surge protectors you count on to protect expensive products are all but useless. Even worse, anyone touching a panel or device with no ground has the potential to become a ground connection themselves.
If you want to know whether there is a grounding system in place, the first clue can be found by checking the outlets. Three-prong outlets are a sure sign of a copper-wire grounding system, as the third slot on three-prong receptacles is for a grounding connection. Appliances and devices with grounded plugs (three-prong) connect directly to the bare copper grounding wires of your home’s circuits.
Wilcox Electric has been providing the Metro DC area with expert electrical service for more than thirty years, including full inspections and updated wiring for older homes. Request an electrical safety assessment, today!