Is water pipe grounding achieved thru pipe or thru water

grounding

I've got a 1901 house, with copper (new) piping. Some of the electrical (old knob and tube circuits) are grounded to the water pipes. The copper pipe goes out to my shutoff valve located outside. so far so good. However, the waterpipe from the shutoff valve to the ground has been replaced with PVC. So, the contact with the ground is actually a PVC waterpipe for at least 1' above ground. My question – Is this considered to be safely grounded? (or do I need to install a ground rod from the cu pipe?).

Best Answer

The grounding is accomplished through the metal pipe, not through the water.

Pure water is an effective electrical insulator. It's only conductive when there are dissolved salts in it (not just NaCl, but any metal salts creating free ions floating around in the water). In that case, water can become a very good conductor. But it isn't really the water doing the conducting.

That PVC pipe is not creating a suitable path to ground.

You need to drive at least one grounding rod (probably an 8' copper or galvanized steel solid rod, which you can buy at your local home improvement warehouse), and run a #6 copper wire from that rod to your main service panel, where you'll bond it to the grounding bus. You also need to leave all of your copper and/or iron pipes bonded to the grounding bus in your main panel.