MossRoad
Super Moderator
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2001
- Messages
- 58,052
- Location
- South Bend, Indiana (near)
- Tractor
- Power Trac PT425 2001 Model Year
There's no neutral circuit. It's ground.Looking back at the pics, I cannot help but wonder if both ends of the broken wire are laying on the chain link fence....thus making the chain link fence complete the neutral circuit and keep the voltage stable in the house.....
If you go out to Eddie's road, and follow the top and bottom wires on the poles to a 3 phase distribution point, the top one is going to be connected to 1 of the phases (hot) and the bottom one is going to be connected to ground, because there's no neutral in that 3 phase distribution.
I just went out and looked at ours. We have 3 phase running down our road. It's three wires on top of the poles. There is no neutral wire. If there was, there would be 4 wires.
One of the 3 phase wires is connected to the top of our transformer. The other top is connected to ground that runs down the pole to earth. There is no neutral wire.
Three wires come out of the secondary of the transformer. Two 120v hots and a center tap neutral. There is no ground wire.
At the house, the 2 hots and neutral pass through the meter. There is no ground wire.
In the service entrance panel, the neutral is bonded to the ground wire that goes out to ground rod(s). That's the only place neutral and ground are bonded.
Any sub-panels past the service disconnect have isolated neutrals and grounds.
At least, that's the way I understand it.