It is the return path but it is at ground potential, you'll see there are no significant insulators on it. Touching it is fine, but I'd recommend against cutting it.The lower wire in the primary - it’s connected to ground.
Does that mean you would not be electrocuted if you were able to reach up on your (25’) tippy-toes somehow, and grab it?
(be assured I have no plans to; this is all hypothetical)
Is it not the return path? (ie kV)
All I know is when one of those things blow it will wake everyone in the house....
It is the return path but it is at ground potential, you'll see there are no significant insulators on it. Touching it is fine, but I'd recommend against cutting it.
If you're in an area with poor ground conductivity (like Alabama), that's especially true. We had a brain-damaged copper thief here who was cutting and stealing the thin copper grounding wires on each power pole. First one, second one ... no big deal. He kept cutting them and cramming them in his bag. Eventually, he had removed enough grounding, and was at a pole with especially bad conductivity, that he was electrocuted. The deputies found him hanging off the pole.
We've even had some utter maniacs climb inside high voltage substations to get at the wiring. More Darwin awards.
Good riddance. Saved the taxpayers a bunch of money that otherwise would have been spent prosecuting and incarcerating his useless bod.