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 - George's Fordson Major - by Anthony West (UK). This is a bit of a technical info to add on to the article about George's Major in the "A Towny Goes Plowing" article. George bought his Major from a an implement sale about 18 years ago for £200.00. There is no known history regarding its origins or what service it had done, but the following work was undertaken by Harold alone to bring it up to show standard. From the engine number, it was found that the major was produced late 19
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