I opened a subpanel and found that both the ground bus bar and cabinet were
bonded to the neutral bus bar.
Is this allowed under any circumstance?
This is a "Y" 208/120 configuration utilizing 5 conductors in an industrial
building.
Thanks.
Yes, ther are a number of situations where this is allowed/required
Service Entrance
Separately Derived System
jk
When was it installed, and have you read the revelant sections of the
NEC?
Sounds good. An example is a panel fed from a transformer.
If it is a panel fed from another panel, the neutral bar must be isolated.
A better newsgroup is probably alt.engineering.electrical.
--
bud--
"Mike Cook" <mc...@NOTyahoo.com> wrote in message news:0001HW.C7190A01...@news.eternal-september.org...
No, according to the NEC it is not allowed in a subpanel at all.
No. As long as it is a sub-panel.
Not to be confused with a seperately-derived system(after a transformer).
RE
With the exception of feeders to separate buildings under previous
editions of the US NEC it is not permissible.
--
Tom Horne
Single building, not large (2000 sq ft?) one service entrance, one main
panel, 3 or 4 subpanels.
It looks like this bond needs to be broken...
Thanks,
Mike (OP)
TROLL DROPPINGS
TOM LAY OFF
YOU NEVER GOT THIS RIGHT TO BEGIN WITH
I AM PROTEUS
>Is it never allowed (US National Electrical Code) to bond the ground bus bar
At least in the rest of the world (=non-US), this is a typical TN-C-S
wiring case, in which the utility company 4 wire TN-C (3L+N) is
delivered to building, in which this is separated to a 5 wire TN-S
(3L+N+PE) system with separate neutral and ground.
This separation is done exactly *once*, typically at the main
entrance, after that, neutral and ground should be kept strictly
separated.
Paul
When you say 'sub-panel', it may be confusing. A step-down transformer
fed from the service entrance, that in turn feeds 208/120 to a panel is
not a sub-panel. In that case the first panel off the transformer is
not a usual 'sub-panel' but a fed from a separately derived source (the
transformer).
You mentioned 208/120 in an 'industrial building', so I think the
building service is not 208/120 directly but may be a higher voltage and
you have a step-down transformer inside the building.
In that case, the ground/neutral *should* be bonded in the first panel
after the transformer.
Now, any other panels fed from the first panel after the step-down
transformer are true 'sub-panels' and thus should not have the ground
and neutral bonded.
So just to be clear here, are you talking about a true 'sub-panel', or
the first panel downstream of a step-down transformer?
daestrom
Correct.
The power is delivered as 3-phase plus neutral to the building. From this --
directly, without transformer -- we have 120 "single phase" branch circuits
in the panel along with 3-wire (3 phase) circuits.
The panel I am describing (with the N & G bond) is not the main panel, so I
presume should not be bonded together.
Thanks,
Mike (OP)