beelsr
Well-known member
My dad's place has got me scratching my head. He was a builder and while definitely old school, definitely not a sparky. I can handle most stuff inside the house and while I know some of this is wrong, some is beyond me and _I_ know to ask for help, so...
Originally ('90s) a single 200A service fed by direct-buried Southwire 350 kcmil AL USE-2. It's a couple hundred feet from the transformer. The original panel fed one and then two detached structures. More on them later.
In the early '00s the building was duplexed, with the second side getting its own 200A panel. The PoCo specced and ran new wire for this, but it's also 350 kcmil AL in 4" PVC - "General Cable BICC Brand SQ 2005". According to what my dad says, the service cable had to be upgraded when the second main panel was added. It just seems... strange to replace the service with just a different brand of the same size - USE-2 is USE-2, right? Anywho, they split the service in the meter box and it runs separately to both panels from there.
Starting with the new/second main panel since it's in better shape: meter -> disconnect -> panel. There's a disconnect on the inside of the wall and 4/0-4/0-4/0-2/0 AL SER then goes over to the second panel. I did note the bare cables cut-off in the meter box. Which was a real "I coulda hadda V8" moment. The 2/0 bare cable from the SER feeder connects from the second panel to the disconnect and from the disconnect goes... no where. The disconnect is bonded back to the original panel's ground lug with two #8 wires. There is a #8 bare wire run down from the second panel with the SER and this GEC connects to the single ground rod that was installed with this second panel. Which just seems... wrong to run the ground through a #8 when there's a 2/0 sitting there doing... nothing. The panel has the N-G bond strap installed under the main lugs and feeds no subpanels.
Moving back to the original panel. It has no N-G bonding strap installed. And I don't think it ever did because it was sitting on the bottom of the panel, covered in 25+ years of dust. The GEC for this panel goes through the BX down through the slab and then to a single completely buried ground rod. The cut-off bare wire from the meter box for this panel ends 1/2" inside the panel.
The first subpanel is an outbuilding a little over 100 feet away from the service entrance. It's a 4 wire feed in PVC conduit, fed from a 100A breaker. Nice that he ran a 4 wire all those years ago. This subpanel has the N-G bond installed. No ground rods - bedrock is maybe 2' below grade.
The second subpanel is the detached garage, 40 feet away. It's a 4 wire feed in PVC, fed from a 100A breaker into a 100A breaker as the disconnect. This panel has N-G bonded via a 12/14ga wire through bottom positions on the bars. N&G cables are run like in a main panel where they're indiscriminately connected to the bonded N&G bars. {OCD attack} Yes, I see doubled neutrals under a single screw. And the variety of brands of breakers. The breaker with the temporary run for the air compressor has already been re-done (Hey, there's a cover for a reason...). And of course, no ground rods (bedrock, again), nor a UFER when he poured the slab (sigh).
And at some point in the last 5,6,7 years, he installed Eaton whole-house surge protectors in all four panels.
What I think needs to be done:
1. for the original panel:
install N-G bonding strap
extend and re-route the G cable for the suppressor around the breakers, not across them. But couldn't I just screw the N&G wires down next to each other since N-G will be bonded in this panel?
2. for the outbuilding subpanel:
de-bond N&G
ground rods
3. for the garage subpanel:
de-bond N&G
ground rods
either:
a. re-route branch circuits in the panel to split N & G wires
need more holes so get add-on bars for each side and nut a pigtail for the wire that needs to move to the other side
b. get a new panel
for ease of wiring each branch down a single side of the panel
so the breakers in the panel are all actually listed to be in the panel
What I'm unsure about:
1. for the second main panel: replace the #8 with a new GEC (size?) from the disconnect to the ground rod. Or does the disconnect cause it to fail the "continuous to the first rod" requirement?
2. Do I need to add a second ground rod for either (both) of the main panels (same building but electrically separate) or is the two ground rod thing only for detached structures? Or bond the single ground rods for the two main panels together? Or are they already bonded enough together through the disconnect's pair of #8s?
Originally ('90s) a single 200A service fed by direct-buried Southwire 350 kcmil AL USE-2. It's a couple hundred feet from the transformer. The original panel fed one and then two detached structures. More on them later.
In the early '00s the building was duplexed, with the second side getting its own 200A panel. The PoCo specced and ran new wire for this, but it's also 350 kcmil AL in 4" PVC - "General Cable BICC Brand SQ 2005". According to what my dad says, the service cable had to be upgraded when the second main panel was added. It just seems... strange to replace the service with just a different brand of the same size - USE-2 is USE-2, right? Anywho, they split the service in the meter box and it runs separately to both panels from there.
Starting with the new/second main panel since it's in better shape: meter -> disconnect -> panel. There's a disconnect on the inside of the wall and 4/0-4/0-4/0-2/0 AL SER then goes over to the second panel. I did note the bare cables cut-off in the meter box. Which was a real "I coulda hadda V8" moment. The 2/0 bare cable from the SER feeder connects from the second panel to the disconnect and from the disconnect goes... no where. The disconnect is bonded back to the original panel's ground lug with two #8 wires. There is a #8 bare wire run down from the second panel with the SER and this GEC connects to the single ground rod that was installed with this second panel. Which just seems... wrong to run the ground through a #8 when there's a 2/0 sitting there doing... nothing. The panel has the N-G bond strap installed under the main lugs and feeds no subpanels.
Moving back to the original panel. It has no N-G bonding strap installed. And I don't think it ever did because it was sitting on the bottom of the panel, covered in 25+ years of dust. The GEC for this panel goes through the BX down through the slab and then to a single completely buried ground rod. The cut-off bare wire from the meter box for this panel ends 1/2" inside the panel.
The first subpanel is an outbuilding a little over 100 feet away from the service entrance. It's a 4 wire feed in PVC conduit, fed from a 100A breaker. Nice that he ran a 4 wire all those years ago. This subpanel has the N-G bond installed. No ground rods - bedrock is maybe 2' below grade.
The second subpanel is the detached garage, 40 feet away. It's a 4 wire feed in PVC, fed from a 100A breaker into a 100A breaker as the disconnect. This panel has N-G bonded via a 12/14ga wire through bottom positions on the bars. N&G cables are run like in a main panel where they're indiscriminately connected to the bonded N&G bars. {OCD attack} Yes, I see doubled neutrals under a single screw. And the variety of brands of breakers. The breaker with the temporary run for the air compressor has already been re-done (Hey, there's a cover for a reason...). And of course, no ground rods (bedrock, again), nor a UFER when he poured the slab (sigh).
And at some point in the last 5,6,7 years, he installed Eaton whole-house surge protectors in all four panels.
What I think needs to be done:
1. for the original panel:
install N-G bonding strap
extend and re-route the G cable for the suppressor around the breakers, not across them. But couldn't I just screw the N&G wires down next to each other since N-G will be bonded in this panel?
2. for the outbuilding subpanel:
de-bond N&G
ground rods
3. for the garage subpanel:
de-bond N&G
ground rods
either:
a. re-route branch circuits in the panel to split N & G wires
need more holes so get add-on bars for each side and nut a pigtail for the wire that needs to move to the other side
b. get a new panel
for ease of wiring each branch down a single side of the panel
so the breakers in the panel are all actually listed to be in the panel
What I'm unsure about:
1. for the second main panel: replace the #8 with a new GEC (size?) from the disconnect to the ground rod. Or does the disconnect cause it to fail the "continuous to the first rod" requirement?
2. Do I need to add a second ground rod for either (both) of the main panels (same building but electrically separate) or is the two ground rod thing only for detached structures? Or bond the single ground rods for the two main panels together? Or are they already bonded enough together through the disconnect's pair of #8s?
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I'll read the rest and be back in a bit. Shower-time...