I do not have an electrical outlet with grounding protection system. The motherboard may fail over time??Thanks in advance!



No, it won't have an effect on motherboard life.I do not have an electrical outlet with grounding protection system. The motherboard may fail over time??Thanks in advance!![]()
Disagree, it's not normal if it does. If it did then a GFI, which trips at only a couple of mili-amps, would trip if the circuit is protected by one. For that type of protection, a GFI is much better. GFI's work by comparing current in the hot and neutral current paths; if not equal they will trip. Any current flowing back through the safety ground means it can't be flowing back through the neutral (Kirchoff's law) ....
Normally this current (up to several mA) flows harmlessly down to ground on a properly earthed system.
It's even more interesting how house wiring standards have changed over time. The problem always will be that houses, or installed electrification more precisely, don't change with them unless someone pays for it. It's simply unfeasible to expect homeowners to rewire to updated standards as they roll out every couple of years. Especially as they change with new technology adoption. Three-wire safety grounded outlets were added in some distant past, probably the 60's, GFI's (RCD's) were introduced in the 70's or 80's, arc fault interrupters (AFI's) much more recently.It's interesting to learn about the differences between house wiring standards around the world. ...
In my area there are still a lot of old and really old homes with originally installed electric service. The really old ones still with knob-and-tube wiring aside: as a homeowner (not electrician) I feel the best thing can do soonest is update an old fuse box load panel to a modern circuit breaker panel. While certainly not cheap, and not a DIY for most of us, it's much less invasive than getting at all the house wiring. But at least your home can be brought up to most modern safety standards with proper (sufficient) ground rods and bonding and allows installation of GFI/AFI breakers for safety. AFI's are also really important if not updating existing wiring since it will detect arcing that occurrs where rodents have chewed insulation or poor installation chafed it away.The original main panel and sub panel have 1 ground rod each to #4 solid copper.
Then the meter which is 125 feet from my home has 2 ground rods with #4 copper.
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There are not very many people who could...or should...attempt DIY electrical work. That's ESPECIALLY true for upgrading an electrical panel and tie-ins to the utility equipment. I have a pretty good understanding of wiring, enough to do many things, but I'd never attempt to upgrade a panel. And if anyone does attempt it absolutely get it the work permitted, inspected by code enforcement and hang a copy of the inspection record inside the panel. You may have several fails and at least one significant re-do before getting a pass but that way there'll be less trouble with insurance coverage or home sales later on....
Everything is much cheaper if you do not have to pay for labor.
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That's great that you have the experience and skills to tackle a job like upgrading an electrical service panel. But many of the people on this forum don't and I wouldn't want to encourage them without a bunch of cautions. It's a far cry different and much more dangerous than opening up a PSU and replacing a fan, already something the old guard of Tom's seems to come unglued over if anyone even so much as suggests.....
Have never failed an inspection yet.
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