by troubleScottie » Thu Sep 17, 2015 12:05 pm
It does not matter if they are exactly at the same point. It might be useful to have separate connectors so both system do not fail at the same time.
If you have a frame with sections -- several pieces mechanically assembled with screws or bolts, I would advice connecting the grounds to the same piece. It is possible that not all frame pieces are not electrically connected to each other or worse have slightly different ground levels. A completely welded frame presumably is one continuous electrical level.
There are two schools of thought on grounding wires. One is to have common wire for every device eg lights including running lights and hence a single common ground for everything. The other is to use a frame ground at or near the end point eg ground the running light to the frame at the light. The later assumes that all points on the frame have the same ground level. And saves a bit on wiring. Technically both should work.
As an observation, while working in an electronics lab, we found that two adjacent AC sockets had different ground levels. It caused all sorts of issues when designing and testing a communication protocol dependent the voltage difference from ground.
Michael Krolewski
Scottish Terrier Fancier