What is the difference? From what I can gather neutral is the reference for the circuit and ground is...not necessarily that but seems to be the voltage the "environment" is at.
I ran into a paper from Rockwell and it said the neutral was a reference point and that ground represents an electrical path
**broken link removed**
But then it says something like all wires connected to the neutral should be non-current carrying, but if it's the reference point for the system how can current not flow through wires connected to the neutral point?
I ran into a paper from Rockwell and it said the neutral was a reference point and that ground represents an electrical path
**broken link removed**
But then it says something like all wires connected to the neutral should be non-current carrying, but if it's the reference point for the system how can current not flow through wires connected to the neutral point?