That don't make it right.
Indeed - it doesn't necessarily make it right.That don't make it right.

Quite.If the earth rod is on the short side so around the 100Ω mark with 10 mm² cable i.e. smaller than the supply cable neutral and close to the head it will simply enhance the DNO multiply earths and be no real harm.
Indeed - and I would suggest so rare as to be of virtually no relevance to domestic (or even most commercial) electrical installations.The problem I saw was when 4 earth rods around 3 meters in length were sunk in each corner of the garden, and in a 750 mm deep trench there was bare copper strip joining them so the total resistance was likely less than the DNO earth pit, less than one ohm. Other than radio hams I think a earth like this is very rare.
I've seen steel-armoured distribution cables where the steel has rusted so much it has broken apart and hangs in limp segments around the core.
Tested by time, and failed.
I can think of at least two cables where the SWA ( not tape ) had rusted away.....My tenner says that was steel tape armouring, not SWA
If the shed is wired as a TT then the Earthing of the shed would not introduce "dangerous stray currents" into the house.In this situation there is no need for an earth rod, unless you deliberately want to connect to dangerous stray currents and intruduce them into the shed and the house.

I have seen SWA fail, and I know one of the jobs done with street lighting was the so called pressure test, where the resistance of the outer cables to earth was measured and logged so after road works it could be retested and contractors fined if they damaged the outer covering of the cable. Be it rust or electrolysis cables with the outer covering damaged can fail, so they need testing on a regular basis, with commercial where the results are logged all well and good. However with domestic measuring is not so common and logging the readings even less common, having a means to disconnect the earth to test is also a problem.My tenner says that was steel tape armouring, not SWA
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