To Cleeds,
Your response that me using a ground isolation receptacle and running the ground wire to an outside grounding rod does not sound logical that the circuit breaker could never trip.
My first house did not even have any ground wires, and I blew plenty of fuses in that house. To this day you do not even need a ground wire between your electrical meter and the first electrical panel in the house. Although you do need to run a ground wire from the first panel to any other panels.
Ok, I mentioned running the neutral and ground wires from that receptacle to the exterior ground rod instead of going back to the electrical panel. There was a 120v circuit between the hot from the circuit breaker and ground wire that ran to the exterior ground rod. Can you explain to me why the 20 amp circuit breaker would not trip if the circuits 20 amp breaker was overloaded, other than it being a defective breaker anyway. It does not make any sense to me that a not defective 20 amp circuit breaker could pass more than the specified amperage just because the ground did not go to the neutral or ground buss bars, that's probably rated for well over 100 amps From your response above anyone that did not know any better would think that even with a dead short a non defective breaker would not trip. You are in essence saying that it would be like not having the circuit breaker at all
Sure, I know that in the rare case that an overloaded 20 amp circuit breaker fails to trip you would hope that the panels 200 amp main breaker would trip before the wire from the 20 amp circuit started a fire.
Either having a defective breaker or like I said previously lightning could, and has started many fires.
Your response that me using a ground isolation receptacle and running the ground wire to an outside grounding rod does not sound logical that the circuit breaker could never trip.
My first house did not even have any ground wires, and I blew plenty of fuses in that house. To this day you do not even need a ground wire between your electrical meter and the first electrical panel in the house. Although you do need to run a ground wire from the first panel to any other panels.
Ok, I mentioned running the neutral and ground wires from that receptacle to the exterior ground rod instead of going back to the electrical panel. There was a 120v circuit between the hot from the circuit breaker and ground wire that ran to the exterior ground rod. Can you explain to me why the 20 amp circuit breaker would not trip if the circuits 20 amp breaker was overloaded, other than it being a defective breaker anyway. It does not make any sense to me that a not defective 20 amp circuit breaker could pass more than the specified amperage just because the ground did not go to the neutral or ground buss bars, that's probably rated for well over 100 amps From your response above anyone that did not know any better would think that even with a dead short a non defective breaker would not trip. You are in essence saying that it would be like not having the circuit breaker at all
Sure, I know that in the rare case that an overloaded 20 amp circuit breaker fails to trip you would hope that the panels 200 amp main breaker would trip before the wire from the 20 amp circuit started a fire.
Either having a defective breaker or like I said previously lightning could, and has started many fires.