Dagny
Well-known member
nice of the phone man clogging up under the panel.
Even with A/C or a heat pump, most how shops can get by on 60A. The size on the breaker in the sub-panel does not matter. What is important is the size of the breaker FEEDING the sub from the main. Wire size is also based on this.most home shops don't require 100 amp services since you're normally only using 1 machine at a time.



as said above, you are limited to 1 neutral per lug. grounds can be doubled up on each lug on most panelsOk guys need a little advice on where I am now. I've been working on getting the sub panel installed yesterday and today. I was able to get the PVC bent and installed around the pipes and I moved the ATT box that was in the way which simplified things a bit. Today getting that wire through the 1.5" conduit was a bi*ch, but me and my neighbor finally got it through. For everyone who suggested 1.5" or anything smaller...God bless you LOL. I've got the sub panel wired up and I just need to wire the main panel which the neutrals bars are all full.
Can I put the bare copper grounds in with the white wires and can I put 3 small copper wires together on one hole or 2 bigger copper wires in one hole to free up the space I need for the neutral terminal kit . Also, can I put the Neutral Terminal Kit on the right neutral bar or does it have to somehow fit on the left where the other one is? I assume there is more spaces behind the breakers that I could get to if I pull out the breakers? Any advice on this part would be great.
![]()
I would swap those 6 long GFCI (or AFCI; cant tell which they are) breakers with shorter ones on the bottom of the panel. this way the neutral bars arent covered up and it gives you access to the rest of the lugs on the neutral bars.Thanks mike93lx. I used fish tape but I think my problem was that when I taped the 4 wires together I spaced them about 3 inched down from the previous wire and those bends didn't like that. Luckily my neighbor is half my age and with him pulling and me pushing we finally got it through. No lube, went in raw on this one lol. Ok, so I can triple the bare grounds probably. What's a sparky? Also, can I add the neutral on the right neutral bar, I think it would be easier to deal with on that side.
Wyliesdiesels, that's what I was thinking about the neutrals being the same, but wanted to be sure. Looks like there are more neutral spaces under the breakers on the right side, if so can I pull the breaker and move some of the grounds under the breaker or would that not be up to code? I will look into adding the ground bar kit as well. Thanks for the suggestions.
Sparky= electrician. There are a few here, but I am not one.Thanks mike93lx. I used fish tape but I think my problem was that when I taped the 4 wires together I spaced them about 3 inched down from the previous wire and those bends didn't like that. Luckily my neighbor is half my age and with him pulling and me pushing we finally got it through. No lube, went in raw on this one lol. Ok, so I can triple the bare grounds probably. What's a sparky? Also, can I add the neutral on the right neutral bar, I think it would be easier to deal with on that side.
Wyliesdiesels, that's what I was thinking about the neutrals being the same, but wanted to be sure. Looks like there are more neutral spaces under the breakers on the right side, if so can I pull the breaker and move some of the grounds under the breaker or would that not be up to code? I will look into adding the ground bar kit as well. Thanks for the suggestions.

Ok theres a number of issues hereOk guys I need some confirmation to be sure I'm on the right track with the sub panel please. I've got a question on where the "green" wire is connected.. You can see in the picture it is marked "Ground Strap" and tied into the lug at the top. Do I connect the bare copper grounds to the ground strap or the area marked "equipment ground" bolted to the case on the far right side? Also, I don't need a ground rod since the sub panel is 30 feet away in the same building right? The wire with the two pieces of green tape on it were to make the neutral wire and not meant to be the ground wire.
![]()

I do not think both bars are neutral bars. If you look on the plastic, the one on the left is labelled "Neutral Strap" and the one on the right is labelled "Ground Strap" and I do not see a strap or anything tying them together anywhere. I'm thinking that is why they put the double lug on the left bar, so you can pull the bonding screw from the right bar and add a jumper from the left bar to the right bar. It looks like there is a place on the left bar to add a second bonding screw to bond everything together through the enclosure. But I can not find an actual manual online to verify any of this.Ok now that Ive looked closer at it, i see those green screws are just connexting the lug to the bar.
Is there a strap tying the left and right bars together? There usually is but in this case the right bar may indeed be a ground bar since i sont see a strap tying the 2 together
Yes the wire needs to be in conduit end to end since it doesnt have an overall sheath or jacket.
yup looks like left bar is neutral and right bar is ground w/ bond screw installed. wonder why they put an addl ground bar in the can (unless the OP added that)I do not think both bars are neutral bars. If you look on the plastic, the one on the left is labelled "Neutral Strap" and the one on the right is labelled "Ground Strap" and I do not see a strap or anything tying them together anywhere. I'm thinking that is why they put the double lug on the left bar, so you can pull the bonding screw from the right bar and add a jumper from the left bar to the right bar. It looks like there is a place on the left bar to add a second bonding screw to bond everything together through the enclosure. But I can not find an actual manual online to verify any of this.
So, if I am correct, if you want to use both sides as neutral bars, remove the green screw, get a short piece of cable, labelled white, and connect the left bar to the right bar using the empty lug on the left bar, then buy a GE Grounding Lug to hook your green cable directly to the separate ground bar on the far right and hook all your grounds to that bar only. If you want to just use the left bar as a neutral, keep it hooked up like you originally had it (but change the green tape to white), put the green screw back in and both bars on the right can be used as grounds.
Every pic I found online of that panel has the additional ground bar, so I assume it comes that way. Weird. And GE's online support is non existent.yup looks like left bar is neutral and right bar is ground w/ bond screw installed. wonder why they put an addl ground bar in the can (unless the OP added that)
Try emailing themEvery pic I found online of that panel has the additional ground bar, so I assume it comes that way. Weird. And GE's online support is non existent.


yes they need to be taped black red or something other than white grey or green since it is NOT a neutral.Ok so the receptacle needs to be the other way, I always wondered about the dryer with that. I'm not sure what you mean by the whites of the NM cables and what would I use to identify them as hots. Are you talking about the wires attached to the breakers in the sub panel?
I hear you. It's healthy to have respect for a panel.Ok, I have some black tape so I'll put some on each of those and get that receptacle turn over.
Mike93lx I'll probably leave those alone for now. I was pretty nervous pulling those breaker to move grounds at first but relaxed after a while lol. The conduit was a bit of a pain but got through it.
Yeah. 100a is only permissible when it is feeding a residential structure. You can drop to anything 90 or below. Somewhere in the 60-70a range may be a sweet spot for price,just make sure it will accept #2. Some 60's dontDamn really, yes that is #2 alum. Great I guess I'll have to look for a smaller breaker because I'm definitely not changing out that wire lol.
He is feeding an attached garage from an exterior panel on the same structure.Yeah. 100a is only permissible when it is feeding a residential structure. You can drop to anything 90 or below. Somewhere in the 60-70a range may be a sweet spot for price,just make sure it will accept #2. Some 60's dont
Only permitted to undersize it when it feeds the entire load of a dwelling.Yeah. 100a is only permissible when it is feeding a residential structure. You can drop to anything 90 or below. Somewhere in the 60-70a range may be a sweet spot for price,just make sure it will accept #2. Some 60's dont
He is feeding an attached garage from an exterior panel on the same structure.
not required by code since its in the same structure as the main.My concern is the subpanel not having a main breaker or disconnect. Thinking he would be limited to the six throw rule. I would side feed the subpanel.
