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by lack taj_Archive
ktone wrote:black taj wrote:All the IGR really does is take the self grounding yoke out of the equation. There is more to it than just that. The advantage is creating a star ground system that is forced by having a home run of romex for each outlet. Even better if that home run terminates at the building steel and main electrical ground or water pipe. This could provide some help with ground loops and induced noise from voltage drops along the neutrals should any recording gear share that neutral with some high current or noisy devices. This is especially helpful with high current stuff like his heaters or incandescent lighting, especially if it is dimmed. BTW dimming with an autotransformer is best. Also, if his requirement is that he provide a minimum amount of heating wattage (thus two heaters) I suggest one 240V high power heater to prevent voltage drops across the neutral. Otherwise he should keep his two heaters on two isolated home run circuits. Even better is to put them on opposing legs of the 240V feed to help keep the load balanced. Of course the thermostats operating at different times would ruin the balancing.What you describe may help mitigate the problem, but the water pipe is still bonded to the neutral at the panel. Part of what I've noticed is that grounds are permitted to be landed on the neutral bus AT THE SERVICE ONLY. Not in sub panels. So if you wanted a simple way to get neutrals (which present circulating currents in the circuit) off your grounds, is to install a ground bar at the panel. This ground bar will then be bonded to your water pipe and your neutral per code. Yes, the ground bar is bonded to the panel and the pipe and should be bonded to steel, it is an indirect connection that may help some.As far as the heaters go, purely resistive loads in and of themselves don't offer much in the way of noise. Inductive loads and loads that have reactance will give your biggest offenders. I had a brief conversation with Steve about EA's grounding system. I was impressed to discover that they employ a chemical ground. Coupled with an isolation transformer, this is probably the only method to get those pesky neutral currents from circulating on your grounds.