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Panel hook up for rough inspection?

KENLUDE97

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Joined
May 22, 2009
Messages
54
Location
Painted Post NY
Ok I'm not real familiar with wiring, i can do about anything else... But wiring has usually been done for me, and wile that is convenient, i don't learn anything. So i need to be ed-u-macated! ;)

I have a newer 200amp panel in my house (1996). I'm running a new 100amp panel in a DETACHED garage. I was told to buy "4 wire" to feed the garage. Ok bought and ran between the 2 boxes. Now i THINK that i know how to hook up the wiring in the new box? I had to buy a extra "ground bar" and screw that to the new box in the garage.

So i have my 2 "hots" that run to the main breakers.

1 to the existing "ground bar" in the box

1 to the new "neutral bar" in the box?

Now does anything tie the neutral and ground bars together? If not then i'm "done"?

Also how do i connect 4 wires into the existing box in the house? Do i need to buy another "ground/neutral bar" for the houses panel? Also again do they get tied together?

Thanks for all the help for a rookie!!! :lol_hitti:beer:

I can take pics tonight if that would be more clear?
 
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oleguy

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Nov 22, 2009
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273
ground/neutral go together at house panel.they are separate at garage.
 

mrb

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Dec 31, 2008
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ground/neutral go together at house panel.they are separate at garage.

not always, depends on where the MBJ is at the house.

look in your house panel, if you see neutrals and grounds on the same bar, or if you see a green screw bonding the neutral bar to the panel then they go together. make sure you use the proper lugs.

what ga wire did you run to the garage?

dont forget you need a main disconnect at the garage if you have more than 6 breaker handles in your new panel, and dont forget your grounding electrodes at the new garage
 

mrb

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Dec 31, 2008
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MBJ = main bonding jumper. This is the one and only place neutral and ground should be tied together. Its usually in the main breaker panel, but not always.
 

fefarms

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Jan 25, 2007
Messages
186
dont forget you need a main disconnect at the garage if you have more than 6 breaker handles in your new panel, and dont forget your grounding electrodes at the new garage

I don't believe a "main disconnect" is required when the building is supplied by a feeder from another panel on the premises. The code provision that cites the "6 breaker handles" is in section 230 which relates to Services. Service conductors are those supplied directly by the power company, and without their own (upstream) overcurrent protection.

I personally would advocate for a simple way to kill all the power to the building, such as a main breaker panel, a back-fed breaker in a main lug panel, or a separate disconnect. But I don't believe the NEC requires this for a building supplied by a feeder.
 

mrb

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Dec 31, 2008
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I don't believe a "main disconnect" is required when the building is supplied by a feeder from another panel on the premises. The code provision that cites the "6 breaker handles" is in section 230 which relates to Services. Service conductors are those supplied directly by the power company, and without their own (upstream) overcurrent protection.

I personally would advocate for a simple way to kill all the power to the building, such as a main breaker panel, a back-fed breaker in a main lug panel, or a separate disconnect. But I don't believe the NEC requires this for a building supplied by a feeder.

main disco closest to point of entry (the feeder, not your door) is required for detached structure -easiest way is with main breaker subpanel
 
OP
K

KENLUDE97

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May 22, 2009
Messages
54
Location
Painted Post NY
mrb A have to drive 2 8' copper rods into the ground outside the garage 10' apart, and take a length of bare copper wire and start at the box loop the 2 pole together then back to the box.
 
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fefarms

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Jan 25, 2007
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186
main disco closest to point of entry (the feeder, not your door) is required for detached structure -easiest way is with main breaker subpanel

Here again the language "closest to point of entry" comes from NEC Article 230, which relates to service conductors.

I've looked at length through the NEC and cannot find any requirement for a detached building to have a disconnecting means, unless it is supplied by service conductors (and there's even an exception to that).

Can you cite the code section that requires a disconnecting means for a building supplied by a feeder? I'm not trying to be a jerk; just genuinely curious what I'm missing in my studies of the NEC.
 

oleguy

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Nov 22, 2009
Messages
273
mrb A have to drive 2 8' copper rods into the ground outside the garage 10' apart, and take a length of bare copper wire and start at the box loop the 2 pole together then back to the box.

from panel to ground rods.not nessary to return to box.6' apart on the ground rods.#6 bare copper.
 

Charles (in GA)

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Jan 11, 2006
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12,489
Location
50 mi south of Atlanta
225.30 requires that each additional building or structure on a single property served by a branch or feeder on the LOAD side of the service disconnect shall be supplied by only one feeder or branch.......

easy enough.......... but.........

225.31 says that a means must be provided to disconnect all ungrounded conductors that supply or pass thru the building or structure (mentioned in 225.30)

and

225.33 says that disconnects for each supply permitted by 225.30 (those branch and feeder circuits mentioned above) shall consist of not more than 6 switches or breakers mounted in a single enclosure or group of separate enclosures or in a switchboard.

225.36 says the disconnects used in 225.31 must be identified as "suitable for use as service equipment"....

and.....

225.39(D) says that the disconnect shall a rating of not less than 60 amps, since an outbuilding with mutiple circuits doesn't meet the requirements of (A) thru (C).

Charles
 
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