strnjss
Well-known member
I had a broken 3 prong power outlet in one of my rooms, so I went to replace it.
I have the old asbestos coated wires.
Inside, I found the hot and neutral wires attached properly, but there is no ground wire.
My little tester says the outlet is wired correctly though, so I assume the outlet box itself is acting as a ground to the body of the outlet as there are only 2 wires.
My multimeter shows that the ground prong does have continuity with the 'frame' of the outlet.
Is this ok?
Also, out of curiosity, if a ground is meant to divert bad/excessive or shorted current into the ground, isn't there a risk of someone touching a device that's grounded like that and being a better source of ground than whatever grounds the device? I know it'll take the path of least resistance, I just don't know what ensures the human isn't that path.
I have the old asbestos coated wires.
Inside, I found the hot and neutral wires attached properly, but there is no ground wire.
My little tester says the outlet is wired correctly though, so I assume the outlet box itself is acting as a ground to the body of the outlet as there are only 2 wires.
My multimeter shows that the ground prong does have continuity with the 'frame' of the outlet.
Is this ok?
Also, out of curiosity, if a ground is meant to divert bad/excessive or shorted current into the ground, isn't there a risk of someone touching a device that's grounded like that and being a better source of ground than whatever grounds the device? I know it'll take the path of least resistance, I just don't know what ensures the human isn't that path.
The GFCI plug will look at the current on both the hot and neutral and if there is more than a 5 mA difference, the GFCI shuts the circuit down. The current imbalance that it protects against is when you become a better path to ground than the neutral.