Mike you are stuck inside a box of thinking you have to use a Ground Rod. Fact is you do not have to have a single ground rod to have an acceptable functional Ground Electrode System (GES).
III. Grounding Electrode System and
Grounding Electrode Conductor
250.50 Grounding Electrode System
All grounding electrodes as described in 250.52(A)(1)
through (A)(7) that are present at each building or structure
served shall be bonded together to form the grounding
electrode system. Where none of these grounding electrodes
exist, one or more of the grounding electrodes specified
in 250.52(A)(4) through (A)(8) shall be installed and
used.
Rather than copy and paste of all of A1 through A8 the electrodes on site are:
1. Metal Under Ground Water Pipe
2. Metal Frame of Building or Structure
3. Concrete Encased Electrode Used in dessert conditions
4. Ground Ring or Radials
5. Rod or Pipe
6. Listed systems like a Chemical Ground Rod or Radial. Used in dessert conditions
7. Plate Electrodes most often used for large utility generators with a few thousand tons of concrete sitting on top of it.
8. Other Local Metal Under Ground Systems or Structures.
If none of the electrodes exist pick one from 4 through 8. Nothing says you have to use RODS. If you do use rods or pipes there are requirements to be met.
Today most all new construction use a Concrete Encased Electrode and the Under Ground Metal Water Pipe. No ground rod or number of ground rods can beat a properly built Concrete Encased Electrode (CCE). It is a take off of the Herbert Ufer ground who worked for Dupont during WW-II and was tasked to come up with a ground system to be used in military Ammunition Bunkers located in AZ dessert where static electricity control is a must. Ufer Ground is real simple where you bond the steel reinforcement bar used inside the concrete and either stub up a section of rebar so a ground wire can be welded or compressed, or just a section of wire bonded to the rebar sticking up through the finished concrete floor. Concrete has a massive surface area and concrete never dries out. Even a small foundation can achieve extremely low impedance of less than 10 ohms. You could pound a hundred rods and never reach that low of an impedance. NEC CCE is a modified version of a Ufer Ground that only requires either 20 foot of conductor in the the bottom of a Footer, or attached (bonded) to the rebar of at least a 20 foot section.
However I agree NEC leaves something to be desired sometimes. YOu woul dbe surprised how many EC's think a GES has to be 25 ohms or less. There is no such requirement.
III. Grounding Electrode System and
Grounding Electrode Conductor
250.50 Grounding Electrode System
All grounding electrodes as described in 250.52(A)(1)
through (A)(7) that are present at each building or structure
served shall be bonded together to form the grounding
electrode system. Where none of these grounding electrodes
exist, one or more of the grounding electrodes specified
in 250.52(A)(4) through (A)(8) shall be installed and
used.
Rather than copy and paste of all of A1 through A8 the electrodes on site are:
1. Metal Under Ground Water Pipe
2. Metal Frame of Building or Structure
3. Concrete Encased Electrode Used in dessert conditions
4. Ground Ring or Radials
5. Rod or Pipe
6. Listed systems like a Chemical Ground Rod or Radial. Used in dessert conditions
7. Plate Electrodes most often used for large utility generators with a few thousand tons of concrete sitting on top of it.
8. Other Local Metal Under Ground Systems or Structures.
If none of the electrodes exist pick one from 4 through 8. Nothing says you have to use RODS. If you do use rods or pipes there are requirements to be met.
Today most all new construction use a Concrete Encased Electrode and the Under Ground Metal Water Pipe. No ground rod or number of ground rods can beat a properly built Concrete Encased Electrode (CCE). It is a take off of the Herbert Ufer ground who worked for Dupont during WW-II and was tasked to come up with a ground system to be used in military Ammunition Bunkers located in AZ dessert where static electricity control is a must. Ufer Ground is real simple where you bond the steel reinforcement bar used inside the concrete and either stub up a section of rebar so a ground wire can be welded or compressed, or just a section of wire bonded to the rebar sticking up through the finished concrete floor. Concrete has a massive surface area and concrete never dries out. Even a small foundation can achieve extremely low impedance of less than 10 ohms. You could pound a hundred rods and never reach that low of an impedance. NEC CCE is a modified version of a Ufer Ground that only requires either 20 foot of conductor in the the bottom of a Footer, or attached (bonded) to the rebar of at least a 20 foot section.
However I agree NEC leaves something to be desired sometimes. YOu woul dbe surprised how many EC's think a GES has to be 25 ohms or less. There is no such requirement.
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