justin1795
Well-known member
I have my ground rods in and they are wired together. What is the proper way to go into the pannel?
I have my ground rods in and they are wired together. What is the proper way to go into the pannel?
The wire needs to be one continuous piece from panel to the rods. You can get the wire to the panel how ever you want as long as it's not in a place that it can get damaged. If running across the ground where a shovel may get it the wire needs to be placed in a sleeve of EMT or copper water pipe. As far as getting it in the house, for an example you can strap it to the side of the meter conduit coming up from the ground and bore a small hole in the house wall and push it inside. You can bore a small hole in the foundation and push it though to under the crawl space and bring it up to the panel.
If running across the ground where a shovel may get it the wire needs to be placed in a sleeve of EMT or copper water pipe.
Don't know your local codes but in nj you can run the thhn right out of ground and into back of panel or into foundation and then into panel. Never have or have seen any house that put the ground rod wire into a pipe or sleeve.
THHN? Huh? Usually solid bare cu #6 or #8 is used...
If thinner than #6 solid I seem to recall that it is required to be protected where exposed.
As far as entering the panel, most panels have a tiny knockout, about ¼" in the back corner of the bottom and top of the housing. You take a small punch and knock it out, and run the ground thru it.
Charles
Yes thinner than #6 is required to be in conduit. And if the #6 is in an area where it can get damaged then it needs to be in conduit as well!!
Now that I think of it, I don't recall anything in NEC that specifies solid for this use, but that's what I've always used and seem to recall inspectors always wanted to see. But THHN is probably fine if that's the case. It would have to be green insulation.
And if it EMT or Rigid Conduit, you will need to bond it on both ends . If you don't the choking effect that ungrounded ferrous conduit has will greatly reduce the ground wire's effectiveness.
And the NEC requires it
You could always go with Schedule 80PVC
I'm not sure yet where it is in the NEC, but I do agree, yes, it MUST be bonded.Will you please state the NEC section that says a metal protective sleeve on the grounding electrode conductor has to be bonded to the electrode conductor.
The Code doesn't specify solid or stranded. You'd have a hard time installing solid 2/0 or 3/0 Grounding Electrode Conductor, evenrce if it was available (I think the biggest produced is #2 solid). THWN is commonly used as a GEC.
The GEC doesn't need to be green. No color is required. You could use Black or even Pink if that is what you desire.
The requirement for conduit isn't just a "West Coast" thing. It's required in the NEC where the GEC is subject to physical damage.
Well it's a good thing none of the inspectors enforce in nj, waste of time and money
Here is South Jersey they require ground rods and Upher grounds,which is continuous ground through rebar and mesh infloor to the panel
I was called on it once, many years ago. I was pretty close with the inspector, and when he explained it to me it made complete sense. He said he had seen the end of a pipe sleeve literally blow apart from a lightning hit, where if it were bonded it would not have.Well it's a good thing none of the inspectors enforce in nj, waste of time and money