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Grounds with different size wire and ground wire nut

penright

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I am running #10 and #12 in the same raceway. I have #10 ground. I assume I can use #12 ground to the duplex that is a wire with #12 load and neutral.
Questions:

1. what size do I have to use for the ground to the box?
2. Do they make green wire nuts that are big enough for a 3 #12 and 2 #10? If not, can you use a different color wire nut?
3. If I have to use #10 for the box ground, my #10 is stranded. How do you attach the stranded wire to the box? I know you would use the same screw, what I am asking is how solid wire would be pressed and stranded would run out from under the screw.
 
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alfredeneuman

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I am running #10 and #12 in the same raceway. I have #10 ground. I assume I can use #12 ground to the duplex that is a wire with #12 load and neutral.
Questions:
1. what size do I have to use for the ground to the box?
2. Do they make green wire nuts that are big enough for a 3 #12 and 2 #10? If not, can you use a different color wire nut?
3. If I have to use #10 for the box ground, my #10 is stranded. How do you attach the stranded wire to the box? I know you would use the same screw, what I am asking is how solid wire would be pressed and stranded would run out from under the screw.

1. #10
2. They don't make green wire nuts that big, and they aren't required. A regular grey or blue wire nut will do.
3. Use a crimp on ring tongue with a #10 hole in it and just use the ground screw as you would normally do.
 

Bert_

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Use whatever wire it is rated to fit. I hardly ever use the green ones myself.

Use solid wire for all your pigtails. Works fine under all screws
 

ard

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AFAIK, You can ground the outlet/device which is connected with #12 wires with a #12 jumper.

WHY are you using #10 for ground? Just because or is it actually required due to design considerations?
 
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penright

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AFAIK, You can ground the outlet/device which is connected with #12 wires with a #12 jumper.

WHY are you using #10 for ground? Just because or is it actually required due to design considerations?
I have a series of outlets along the top of the workbench. I included a picture to help. Please don't judge about the clutter.
At the end of the outlets is another JBox for the compressor connection. I ran #10 for that and it passes through the 3 outlet boxes. I used #12 for the duplex outlets circuit. My understanding for the #10 circuit I have to use #10 ground. I also understand for the outlets I only have to use #12. The grey area was the JBoxes. Since the outlets are #12 can I use #12 to the box or because #10 is passing through the box I have to use #10.



J8TX9AS7v834ob2tZ6Gr8TVbPnpmNwx-mLenyHEQ4ytjPQy6uubEPHUkZ7PvkRHZISCpf04rNXMYxxDx87OtkkvkT112l6KB19KMJ17te5wjhOVwXcwm5n2iCQCZwvSTPWX6U1Np7aLn70wY6kicHJ9vKmjPbemHE1Dk85zFzh4QBzcjXMdtVhsyLTGrqWwEa15JgZt0ddBdxT2669-PAcDc2xm4WAFpqVghEGBK1iRfvtJ-o9CwKwWqsfNsHlQjs7l84hvmqeCw64_lzMruT0YOrxoR1IKjIcZyV2VjbQ1cspWcqoNyPylFYV2R2CYeq7vhUhyNtdfwLYtVY1bH_E8GZfA9BdHoK9Av_k02JkDkjAGogo8xEuvU5vOuQvnjxyPCJQyZNlyl91y6VBXFLstomMLMGPt-QMk0d8gBzgEfSsc72R2Z8X97txYA1dTrRqLktF913eK5AAATVNXMvxJf30jqfmUbDadsmPjLimpqB1CpQCUfxFkBxjC11Sx8anWKCM4ASWgRj-XS6YotA8B0y3NzVZwiXlYyzRtQ1diaULj2H30Vb0EcqTrV6ReZpZXeK-qWf4-cKD9gB46-D03oAdJUd6cyrE7BQ10GCNytVjkfSae9nNaCUqbxWHJmofXIp73DTfI9X_2T_jVhkN15sql7nPFgeSpPGnfdow-xPAHBYIP8se5h3EplmUA-7pXw0qVwFzXVIX7pNxdj1V9ql7K-JeKjcf6CKDHvabuEb5I=w666-h888-no
 

ard

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....but if you choose to do so it must be sized to the largest grounding conductor applicable to the circuits in the conduit, which is in this case is #10.

Are you sure there is only one ground? Or is he running multiple grounds for the various 'circuits' he is running????

I ran #10 for that and it passes through the 3 outlet boxes. I used #12 for the duplex outlets circuit. My understanding for the #10 circuit I have to use #10 ground. I also understand for the outlets I only have to use #12.

]
 
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penright

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Sorry about the confusion. I understood what @sberry was saying. Just after the building was built and I was getting ready to run electrical, I posed the question if I had to pull a ground with EMT. Of course, the answer was no, but it would not hurt. Just if you did pull a ground then you had to ground the boxes. I decided to go with the ground wire. Also, I was running into a box fill issue that I could have pulled the ground wire out and helped, but after adding the lid, I was in limits. Again, sorry I was not clear.

Back to this thread.
There are 3 circuits in that raceway. One is outlet power, the other is switched lights, and the third is the compressor. The outlet power and switched lights are #12. I actually had a #12 ground. Then when I pulled the #10 for the compressor, I pulled the #12 ground running from the distribution panel looped into each JBox and replaced it with a #10 ground. So, for now, I spliced the #12 that grounded the box and the outlets to the #10 ground. What I was asking if I need to replace the #12 going to the box with a #10.
There were more questions were answered. They were wire nut color and stranded wire to a screw were answered. Color does not matter (green) as long as the size is correct for that splice. If I need to replace the #10 ground to the box, then I need to get some solid #10 ground.

Again, sorry for the confusion.
 

alfredeneuman

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What I was asking if I need to replace the #12 going to the box with a #10.

You only need 1 ground per conduit
If the box is grounded with a #12; as long as the #10 is present, (and you've got #10s for the active conductors) you need to switch it to a #10.

You could downsize the ground to a #12 if there are only #12s in the conduit and the boxes.

I hope that I understood this time. :confused: :)
 

alfredeneuman

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Solid wire ***** to begin with let alone 10 solid. Use stranded wire and fork stake on to the receptacle.

As long as the receptacles are fed with #12s he could run #12s for the pigtails wirenutted to the #10.
Any receptacle designed for #10 (such as 30 amp) will accept a #10 ground wire
 
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mm08822

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Penright, since you did a good job of running the conduit and mounting boxes to the steel girts, I would forget the gnds. A lot of headache for very little gained.

The jumper to the recepts could even be eliminated b/c of using raised covers on surface mounted steel boxes. If you still want these, then make some #12 green jumpers with stakons and connect to jbox.
 
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penright

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as long as the #10 is present, (and you've got #10s for the active conductors) you need to switch it to a #10
I was betting that would be the case. Seems to me if current-carrying #10 shorted to the box then the ground would have to carry the current till the breaker tripped.


Any receptacle designed for #10 (such as 30 amp) will accept a #10 ground wire
Actually the compressor will be hardwired. I am using 3 conductor #10 SO cord. It is about 15' from the breaker and well within the 50'. There is a clear line of sight to the breaker. The compressor just wants the L1, L2, and ground. Without the ground wire I would have had to connect to the box, which is ok, just feel better with the ground wire.


The outlets and switched light circuits (#12) was existing before the compressor. I started to run a separate conduit. https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showpost.php?p=8116056&postcount=6 Then I figured I can run it in the existing raceway. That is why #12 was there already and hence my changing of the grounds.


For here is more information that you care, here is the link for the entire "do I use existing raceway or new one/box fill" thread. https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=432765
 
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