Just noticed this when getting a new AC installed yesterday. Not sure if it’s a bird or squirrel nest, or even active. It’s super high up that I don’t have a ladder to reach, also I am not super cool with being that close to electrical wiring but I feel like it’s a hazard that needs to be removed. Anyone else experience this and what you suggest my approach should be or what service might need to be hired?

  • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Eh. I don’t see any compromised insulation on any of those wires. Honestly, I wouldn’t even bother. Just head on up there with a nonmetallic ladder and poke that junk out of there with something nonconductive if you’re worried. I ain’t afraid of no volts. (And before anyone freaks out, that bare aluminum cable is structural, to prevent the wires from sagging. It’s not carrying any current.)

    It seems to me that whatever built that nest decided to abandon it before moving in. There isn’t any visible bird shit around it which there certainly would be if it had birds in it (especially ones big enough to drag those sticks up there) and the lack of chewed material around it indicates a lack of extant rodents.

    • Red0ctober@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      The bare cable may also be for ground, but it’s hard to tell. Even so, shouldn’t carry any current, unless there’s a lightning storm happening

      • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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        17 hours ago

        Ground wires don’t go from the pole to the house. Your home’s ground literally goes into the ground, either via a stake or by being attached to a cold water pipe. Having your ground connected to distant objects/poles/locations is counterproductive, because the extreme distance is likely to wind up with different potentials at different points, which would put current on the ground wire all the time, which is exactly what you don’t want.

        Anyway, notice that the big bare wire is not actually electrically connected to anything and is only attached to a tensioner pulling it against the house. The ferrule on the end is to keep it from fraying over time.

        • WhyIAughta@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          It’s called neutral supported cable, the bare support wire is also the houses neutral wire.

          Still safe to touch, but it is technically a current carrying wire.

          • beastlykings@sh.itjust.works
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            9 hours ago

            Even though it’s neutral, and very close to ground potential… Depending on how much current is flowing through the other two wires, the voltage on the neutral will be varying amounts of non zero. Probably not enough to kill you, but maybe enough to feel bad, under the right circumstances.

            That’s why, even though the neutral and the ground are bonded together in the breaker panel, you still need to run a separate wire to your outlet to ground your appliances. Electricity doesn’t take the easiest path, it takes all paths simultaneously, relative to their resistance, favoring the easiest. Don’t make yourself a path 🤷‍♂️

            Still nothing to be afraid of, you shouldn’t be messing with it anyway. Just steer clear and you’ll be fine.

            Note: I’m not an electrician.

            • WhyIAughta@lemmy.world
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              8 hours ago

              The neutral is bonded to ground at the panel, the current is pretty much zero. wires look well insulated, I would feel very comfortable climbing up on a ladder a couple feet away poking it off with a wooden stick.

              • beastlykings@sh.itjust.works
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                6 hours ago

                You’re not entirely wrong, but the ground in the panel is better for lightning strikes, and surprisingly bad at sinking actual current meant for the neutral return to the transformer.

                That’s part of what makes a loose neutral such a fire hazard.

                Yes, it’s likely safe, and I’d probably put my hand on it without much thought, same with working in a hot panel, the neutral/ground bus is probably fine.

                But this is the Internet, if you start making blanket statements about things being safe, you’re gonna have a bad time. And some person who doesn’t know any better, might have a worse time.

                Better to at least acknowledge that there are still dangers, however small.