Teken,
I finally got some time to open it up. Photo attached.
The Tripp-Lite surge suppressor is plugged into the GFI outlet. The black box in the back is a compact lithium UPS. The hub plugs into that.
I ordered the harsh hub. If I'm understanding your advice, I would add a bare copper ground wire to the lug and connect it to the ground inside the box of the GFI outlet. Is that correct?
Thanks again for your help on this.
You have a couple ways to do it if you have different goals.
Quick & Dirty: You can do as you suggested and run a ground wire into the GFCI outlet.
Fast & Easy: Make a plug with a single 12-14 AWG stranded (green / green & yellow) cable. The ground to the switch is simply connected to the new plug which connects directly to the ground prong and than inserted into the GFCI outlet.
Long Term: Install a ground bar so anything can be easily connected to a ground. The primary ground is connected to the GFCI using either method. Per code the ground would be hardwired and not removable as with the ground plug solution and doesn’t take up an outlet.
Do Better: Anything that is metal especially the box must be grounded to the homes single point Earth ground. If a piece of equipment has a ground lug / screw this must be grounded to insure chassis & equipment grounding.
Wire: Any wire that is looped becomes a giant induction coil.
Think Magnet . . .
I know you worked with how things came such as the SPD etc. They give you a huge amount of AC wire to reach an outlet. But it’s imperative that all wiring be as short as possible inside the metal box. I know in reality it’s a lot of extra work and cost to shorten the power cables but doing so increases space, reduces the impact of RFI / EMI etc.
Just something to consider if possible.
There is a huge service loop of Ethernet cable which on the surface shows great planning and long term maintenance should it be required
Given it’s not shielded cable and not grounded this service loop is just a giant antenna and magnet waiting for a collect call from Zeus / Thor.
As stated earlier it’s important to add in an external heat sink to anything that you believe is susceptible to heat. Adding a temperature controlled PWM fan will promote air flow and help in reduced temperatures within the sealed box.
Appreciate you taking the time to share the internal photos. Let us know what direction you take and how everything turns out in the short / long term. Everyone wants to see a positive outcome which you surely deserve given the loss in equipment.
Lastly, absolutely agree with TonyR as it relates to using dielectric grease on any exposed wiring / screws / bolts with respect to grounding.