Bonding from a different circuit

Hi. I have a house wiring question. I have noticed that there's an old

2 wire with no bare copper bonding(?) in a ceiling light fixture. I have been doing some wiring on the floor above and could easily run a length of wire from a new grounded receptacle to the box in the celing below. Would this be safe? Basically running the ground from the light below to a ground in a different circuit? Neither circuit is heavy; just normal 15A type stuff.
Reply to
yaleh.paxton.harding
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housing codes around here does not allow for lights to be connected to the outlet circuits. you may want to run new wire down to the breaker box and give your lights a separate breaker. also, in some area's fault breakers are now required.

Reply to
Jamie

According to the simplified code book here (Toronto), there are 3 good ways to bond a non bonded circuit:

1- run a green wire to the plumbing in the basement (no way!), 2- use gfci in breaker panel (hmmm, maybe), 3- use gfci receptacle. (there is a receptacle in the circuit in question).

BUT,,, I thought that since it was easy for me to do now I could run the ground from the other circuit- but I wonder is there something I might be missing that is dangerous about that?

We here are allowed (as far as I know- I'll have to double check now!!!) to run a light after a receptacle. Can't imagine what problem that could cause.

Thanks.

Reply to
yaleh.paxton.harding

He is talking ground, not hot or neutral.

The ground isn't really part of the circuit. It's an additional path to earth. It's usually run in the walls with a bare or green wire (in the USA), and shared between different circuits.

Run a green wire to the ceiling light from the green wire in the walls, or to some nearby plumbing. Either will work.

--
Regards,
   Robert Monsen

"Your Highness, I have no need of this hypothesis."
     - Pierre Laplace (1749-1827), to Napoleon,
        on why his works on celestial mechanics make no mention of God.
Reply to
Robert Monsen

I'm using romex 14 gauge, 2 wire + bare wire (hot [black], neutral [white], ground[nude). So that will be okay then to just "borrow" or "extend" the ground from my new receptacle upstairs to this ceiling light below?? Sorry to beat this one to death, but electricity scares me!

Thanks!!

Reply to
yaleh.paxton.harding

Yes, they are generally all connected to each other someplace anyway. No current should be flowing through the bare ground wire except in the case of problem/short.

That is how GCFI plugs work; they make sure the same amount of current is flowing through hot and neutral, and not leaking off someplace else, either through the ground wire or through your body. If they aren't the same, the GCFI trips and disconnects the hot wire using a relay.

--
Regards,
   Robert Monsen

"Your Highness, I have no need of this hypothesis."
     - Pierre Laplace (1749-1827), to Napoleon,
        on why his works on celestial mechanics make no mention of God.
Reply to
Robert Monsen

Ah the beauty of the GFCI.. Thanks for all the information.

Reply to
yaleh.paxton.harding

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