JakeKohl
Well-known member
I have a 2 story garage with a 100Amp subpanel. It's joined to my main house by way of a 2 car carport sharing the roof line with the house. Effectively, the carport is a glorified breezeway with attic space.
My power company would not let me have a second meter specifically for the garage because they considered the carport as joining the garage to the house.
My 100Amp subpanel is tied into my main panel on the house with feeds for the hot, neutral, and ground...the neutral and ground busses are separated in the subpanel. I need some advice on a couple of things:
1) does the subpanel need it's own grounding rods?
2) if I have grounding rods on the subpanel, do I need to do something different with the ground and/or neutral feed coming into the subpannel or can the ground in the primary panel and the ground in the subpanel be tied together and left as-is?
I've had lightening / arcing issues in this house before where a lightning ground strike to the south of my house would immediately trigger a sharp arc between the drier vent hose (aluminum) and a copper water line that burned holes in the dryer hose and left black marks on the wall...scary stuff...I grounded the water line back to the primary panel's grounding rod to solve the issue. I'll have a lot of expensive electronics in the new structure.
3) Is there any advantage or extra security to having the subpanel grounded in addition to the primary panel?
My power company would not let me have a second meter specifically for the garage because they considered the carport as joining the garage to the house.
My 100Amp subpanel is tied into my main panel on the house with feeds for the hot, neutral, and ground...the neutral and ground busses are separated in the subpanel. I need some advice on a couple of things:
1) does the subpanel need it's own grounding rods?
2) if I have grounding rods on the subpanel, do I need to do something different with the ground and/or neutral feed coming into the subpannel or can the ground in the primary panel and the ground in the subpanel be tied together and left as-is?
I've had lightening / arcing issues in this house before where a lightning ground strike to the south of my house would immediately trigger a sharp arc between the drier vent hose (aluminum) and a copper water line that burned holes in the dryer hose and left black marks on the wall...scary stuff...I grounded the water line back to the primary panel's grounding rod to solve the issue. I'll have a lot of expensive electronics in the new structure.
3) Is there any advantage or extra security to having the subpanel grounded in addition to the primary panel?
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