If you should touch the wire and touch the grounded chassis at the same
time.
New elements are literally a center conductor, surrounded with
insulation (ceramic) encased inside a metal tube that is grounded. As
long as the ceramic does not leak out, virtually an impossibility, there
is no way for the 22oV to reach the human being using the over. Ther
ceramic insulator is also why you should no bend suach a preformed oven
elelment.
BOb Hofmann
No Bob replacing the element with a modern one does not involve any
grounding problems nor wireing problems.
The problem in trying to do this is that the ceramic socket will not
accept any modern element and would need replacing if possible to find
one. Also there is no available mounting bracket to support the element
and it must be supported since it is the upper broil element not the
bottom bake element.
I wish I could find a one of the old terminal conversion kits and a
universal replacement element that used to be available for these ranges.
But since the old helpful couter men are now extinct thanks to the
uncaring companies that could care less about helping anyone and only hire
minimum wage know nothings that have little expertise beyond looking at a
computer screen.
Gnack