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Anonymous
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It needs to be able to send electrons into the ground (i.e., the earth) through an uninterrupted conducting material (i.e., wire, pipe, conduit, etc).
wgscott":3braz0ca said:Replace the plug with a 3-pronged Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter plug (about $10). 95% of electrocution fatalities are caused by ground faults. This little investment could save your life.
BTW as long as your box, and the conduit leading out of it, is metal, you are probably ok. If you open it up and there is a 3rd wire (the ground) you should use that.
You should turn off the electricity at the circuit panel first.
DOGMAI":8khkd2t8 said:I just did all this. If there is no third (green) wire in the box than there is no ground. If there is a cold water copper pipe neer you can ground to that. If you ground to the earth there needs to be an 8' x 1/2" copper rod 8' into the ground to get a good ground. That rod is about $13 at HD.
Take your outlet out and drill a small hole throught the back of the outlet box and through the wall to the outside. Drive the copper rod into the ground and then run a copper grounding wire through the hole you made and attach it to the copper rod using a grounding clamp. Get a GFCI outlet and install it in place of the old outlet. Hook up the black and the white and then the new green ground to the GFCI and screw it back in. Assumiong you live on the first floor and your outlets are standard height in the appartment, there will only be a small amount of wire visible outside the appartment. Paint it the same color as the exterior and it wont even be noticable. You can do this for under $30 at Home Depot.
Thanks,
Shane