Model A Fan
Well-known member
I recently put in a GFCI in my garage so I could run heat tape to keep my pipes from freezing. The heat tape is supposed to be on a GFCI for safety.
I installed the GFCI in a metal box, then ran the 14/2 Romex to it. I then ran the romex into the panel where I was greeted with an unexpected surprise. The previous owner must have wired the panel on their own and never grounded the panel through the orange Romex they used (10/3 I believe).
The ground from the feeder to the panel is "grounded" into the neutral bar as are all the other grounds going in. The funny thing is that there (before I put in my GFCI) only one thing actually hooked up and working in the panel, a light switch right below the panel for an overhead LED.
What I'd like to do is correct the issue so my GFCI doesn't have an open ground. Can I correct this issue by taking the feeder ground and connecting it to the newly installed (by me) ground bar that my GFCI is connected to? My understanding is that this would correct the issue of an open ground and correctly wire the sub-panel for future use. When testing the GFCI, it pops as hot/neutral reversed. This isn't possible as the neutral is connected to the silver screw on the GFCI and then to the neutral bar. The black wire is connected to the gold screw and then to the breaker. There are pigtails inside the box for each wire (hot, neutral, ground). Ground is connected to the ground bar inside the sub-panel.
I plan on redoing the wiring in my garage anyway and having a bigger gauge feeder put in, but until I can get that done, this would be a stop-gap to keep everything functional.
Based on the photos, what is wrong with the sub-panel? I've identified the improperly grounded feeder needing to re fixed, and lack of ground bar in the box, which I addressed. I plan on pulling the grounds out of the neutral bar as well and removing the romex that is not being used.
For reference, the feeder romex ground wire is the slightly thicker bare copper directly to the right of the green wire in the neutral bar, next to an open neutral screw hole.
Thank you for your time and assistance.








I installed the GFCI in a metal box, then ran the 14/2 Romex to it. I then ran the romex into the panel where I was greeted with an unexpected surprise. The previous owner must have wired the panel on their own and never grounded the panel through the orange Romex they used (10/3 I believe).
The ground from the feeder to the panel is "grounded" into the neutral bar as are all the other grounds going in. The funny thing is that there (before I put in my GFCI) only one thing actually hooked up and working in the panel, a light switch right below the panel for an overhead LED.
What I'd like to do is correct the issue so my GFCI doesn't have an open ground. Can I correct this issue by taking the feeder ground and connecting it to the newly installed (by me) ground bar that my GFCI is connected to? My understanding is that this would correct the issue of an open ground and correctly wire the sub-panel for future use. When testing the GFCI, it pops as hot/neutral reversed. This isn't possible as the neutral is connected to the silver screw on the GFCI and then to the neutral bar. The black wire is connected to the gold screw and then to the breaker. There are pigtails inside the box for each wire (hot, neutral, ground). Ground is connected to the ground bar inside the sub-panel.
I plan on redoing the wiring in my garage anyway and having a bigger gauge feeder put in, but until I can get that done, this would be a stop-gap to keep everything functional.
Based on the photos, what is wrong with the sub-panel? I've identified the improperly grounded feeder needing to re fixed, and lack of ground bar in the box, which I addressed. I plan on pulling the grounds out of the neutral bar as well and removing the romex that is not being used.
For reference, the feeder romex ground wire is the slightly thicker bare copper directly to the right of the green wire in the neutral bar, next to an open neutral screw hole.
Thank you for your time and assistance.


















