His200HerScout
Well-known member
This is my thought for wiring my new detached garage, which was just built and has no electrical service yet.
Currently, my house has 150A service from an overhead line, feeding a 150A panel in my basement.
I want to remove that service, and instead have 200A buried service run to my detached garage, which will have a 200A panel with feed thru lugs.
I want to run three 3/0 copper wires plus a #4 ground 75 feet from the feed thru lugs in the detached garage to the 150A panel in my basement inside a 3" conduit. This would make my basement panel a subpanel, so I would unbond the neutral and ground at that panel.
Down the road, I want to replace the 150A panel in my basement with a 200A panel with feed thru lugs just like the one in the detached garage. The reason is that I will be building an addition above my attached garage (I have both an attached and detached garage). Then take the 150A panel in my basement and put it up in the addition. The addition's 150A panel will power both the addition and the garage below.
Eventually, it'll look like this:
pole -> meter -> garage panel -> house panel -> addition panel
The detached garage and house will both have ground rods. The ground wire at the detached garage will be bonded to the neutral. The ground wire in the basement and addition will NOT be bonded because they will be subpanels. Correct?
My big question is: Is it OK to gang main panels in this manner? I think so, because each set of feed thru lugs is protected by the panel's main breaker. However, I'm not sure if feed thru lugs are supposed to feed subpanels 75 feet away.
Did I get that ground wire size right?
I made a diagram. Not quite electrical engineering quality, but I think it describes my plans.
Thanks!
Currently, my house has 150A service from an overhead line, feeding a 150A panel in my basement.
I want to remove that service, and instead have 200A buried service run to my detached garage, which will have a 200A panel with feed thru lugs.
I want to run three 3/0 copper wires plus a #4 ground 75 feet from the feed thru lugs in the detached garage to the 150A panel in my basement inside a 3" conduit. This would make my basement panel a subpanel, so I would unbond the neutral and ground at that panel.
Down the road, I want to replace the 150A panel in my basement with a 200A panel with feed thru lugs just like the one in the detached garage. The reason is that I will be building an addition above my attached garage (I have both an attached and detached garage). Then take the 150A panel in my basement and put it up in the addition. The addition's 150A panel will power both the addition and the garage below.
Eventually, it'll look like this:
pole -> meter -> garage panel -> house panel -> addition panel
The detached garage and house will both have ground rods. The ground wire at the detached garage will be bonded to the neutral. The ground wire in the basement and addition will NOT be bonded because they will be subpanels. Correct?
My big question is: Is it OK to gang main panels in this manner? I think so, because each set of feed thru lugs is protected by the panel's main breaker. However, I'm not sure if feed thru lugs are supposed to feed subpanels 75 feet away.
Did I get that ground wire size right?
I made a diagram. Not quite electrical engineering quality, but I think it describes my plans.
Thanks!