David, GREAT QUESTION what you do as I best recall is to bond the incoming equipment grounding conductor (one carried out from panel) to a local mother earth ground at the barn. At the barn you would have driven ground rods or buried foundation structural steel or metal utility pipes as the local mother earth ground. What happens is the equipment grounding conductor out from the main panel being in parallel with the phase conductors acquires a potential higher then mother earth at the barn. When you re bond it to the barns ground it brings it back down to earth there so bossie isn't shocked.
Basically re bond the equipment grounding conductor carried out from the panel to the local ground system.
Make sense??????? Answer your question ????? Any other professional/experienced electricians or electrical engineers add to this ???? I'm rusty on this stuff NO WARRANTY
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Today's Featured Article - Grain Threshing in the Early 40's - by Jerry D. Coleman. How many of you can sit there and say that you have plowed with a mule? Well I would say not many, but maybe a few. This story is about the day my Grandfather Brown (true name) decided along with my parents to purchase a new Ford tractor. It wasn't really new except to us. The year was about 1967 and my father found a good used Ford 601 tractor to use on the farm instead of "Bob", our old mule. Now my grandfather had had this mule since the mid 40's and he was getting some age on him. S
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