bluegoose972
Well-known member
I'm not an electrician, so bare with me.
So, hired an electrician to install a service to my new shop. Nothing is wired inside yet. He pulled directly off the meter at the service drop, so this will be considered a main panel. Came across with 4/0 aluminum for my 150 amp service. Everything is good to this point. He installed a disconnect at the meter, I assume is rated for 150 amp (need to put my eyes on it tonight).
The breaker box I have is rated for 200 amp. The intent was to have the service terminate into a 150 amp fuse before energizing the main panel. But he wired it directly to the main panel.
I wanted the ability to shut down the building at this box, but he says I can just shut it off at the meter. Thinking about it, the number of times I have ever shut down the entire service to my house would be ZERO. So is it a big deal to have the disconnect at the service drop? Is there any reason to have two disconnects?
Second thing is the ground/neutral. He showed up Saturday and ran a wire from the neutral bus to my shop structural steel and said "Good...Now your shop is grounded!". I stopped him and said "Don't I need two ground rods installed for the building?" He said "I guess", as if it was optional, and said he would install when I have him return to install the wiring in the shop. So, I started reading GJ. But I'm confused. Do the ground rods just ground the building? Or do you run a line up to the main box? If so, does it connect to the same bus as the neutral?
Sorry for my ignorance. Reading some of the posts are confusion because of the difference between subpanels and main panels.
So, hired an electrician to install a service to my new shop. Nothing is wired inside yet. He pulled directly off the meter at the service drop, so this will be considered a main panel. Came across with 4/0 aluminum for my 150 amp service. Everything is good to this point. He installed a disconnect at the meter, I assume is rated for 150 amp (need to put my eyes on it tonight).
The breaker box I have is rated for 200 amp. The intent was to have the service terminate into a 150 amp fuse before energizing the main panel. But he wired it directly to the main panel.
I wanted the ability to shut down the building at this box, but he says I can just shut it off at the meter. Thinking about it, the number of times I have ever shut down the entire service to my house would be ZERO. So is it a big deal to have the disconnect at the service drop? Is there any reason to have two disconnects?
Second thing is the ground/neutral. He showed up Saturday and ran a wire from the neutral bus to my shop structural steel and said "Good...Now your shop is grounded!". I stopped him and said "Don't I need two ground rods installed for the building?" He said "I guess", as if it was optional, and said he would install when I have him return to install the wiring in the shop. So, I started reading GJ. But I'm confused. Do the ground rods just ground the building? Or do you run a line up to the main box? If so, does it connect to the same bus as the neutral?
Sorry for my ignorance. Reading some of the posts are confusion because of the difference between subpanels and main panels.