FOIWATER said:
This is because the fault current travels through the Earth outside the occupancy to reach the distribution transformer center tap.
That is the important and oft misunderstood point.
Current must get back to the transformer winding from whence it came.
Its intended path is via the "neutral" wire, or in 230 volt equipment via the other "hot" wire.
Should a fault occur, now its
intended alternate path is via the green wire. That wire is really a "Bonding" conductor but is usually called "Ground". That's a misnomer. If the current has to resort to Earth to get back we have a wiring error and code violation.
There's a subtle quirk of terminology at work here, and it stems from the unfortunate dual use of the word "Ground" .
"Ground" means earth, as in where our feet are planted.
"Ground" is mis-used to mean "Power Supply Return", and that mis-use is almost ubiquitous.
In NEC there's a distinction between Bonding and Grounding.
The purpose of the green wire is to provide a low impedance path back to the transformer neutral that does not include earth.
That is called Bonding.
Bonding ties equipment together so that a path back to the transformer winding from which current came, consisting of all metal conductor, will exist.
The green wire provides that bond. Metal conduit or cable tray can also be used with 'approved' connectors.
The point where all the green wires join up with the transformer center tap is in the breaker panel.
That point is earthed, and connected to the big incoming neutral wire from utility "pole-pig" transformer's center tap. That neutral is the bare wire from your pole around which the two insulated ones are draped.
tnis photo courtesy
http://inspectapedia.com/electric/Electrical_SEC_Sizes_Amps.php
Observe in this picture that fault current from "Load" can make it back to Utility Power centertap X0 without using earth.That point is tied to Earth at the meter, which is usually right at the entrance to that panel.
We used to use the incoming water pipe but with the popularity of PVC pipe we now drive a grounding electrode, usually a copper coated steel rod, at the service entrance.
The reason for that is to keep high voltages, arising from either lightning or a primary to secondary short in utility transformer, out of the house
Without the bonding conductor , 'Ground" would become a voltage divider and might not even trip the circuit breaker
It's important to have awareness of the distinction between "Grounding" and "Bonding".
Bonding ties equipment together.
Grounding ties equipment to earth.
Unfortunately we use those two different terms as if they were interchangeable.
That''s a language problem not an electrical one.
ps those drawings courtesy of Mike Holt Enterprises, a handy link is here:
http://forums.mikeholt.com/showthread.php?t=95495see also
http://ecmweb.com/code-basics/grounding-and-bonding-part-1-3