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[email protected] November 9th 06 11:35 PM

Main panel to main panel wiring in converting multi-family to single family dwelling
 
I have been remodeling a 2 family home into a single family home which
had 2 main panels. I would like to make one panel into a subpanel but
am not sure how the grounding should be on the subpanel. Can I leave it
ground the way it is (as a main panel) or should it be ground to the
other main panel now? Any help would be greatly appreciated.


RBM November 9th 06 11:42 PM

Main panel to main panel wiring in converting multi-family to single family dwelling
 
As a sub panel, it will get its feed from the main panel. The feed will be
four wires, two hot, one neutral, and one ground. In the sub panel there
will be a neutral buss and a ground buss, which are isolated from each
other. The neutral loads will be attached to the new neutral buss, and the
grounds to the ground buss. Be sure to remove the bonding jumper which
currently connects the neutral/ground buss to the panel


wrote in message
oups.com...
I have been remodeling a 2 family home into a single family home which
had 2 main panels. I would like to make one panel into a subpanel but
am not sure how the grounding should be on the subpanel. Can I leave it
ground the way it is (as a main panel) or should it be ground to the
other main panel now? Any help would be greatly appreciated.




Toller November 9th 06 11:43 PM

Main panel to main panel wiring in converting multi-family to single family dwelling
 

wrote in message
oups.com...
I have been remodeling a 2 family home into a single family home which
had 2 main panels. I would like to make one panel into a subpanel but
am not sure how the grounding should be on the subpanel. Can I leave it
ground the way it is (as a main panel) or should it be ground to the
other main panel now? Any help would be greatly appreciated.

If you have to ask this, I sure wouldn't want to live in a house with your
wiring. Good luck with the inspector.



cjo004 November 10th 06 12:09 AM

Main panel to main panel wiring in converting multi-family to single family dwelling
 

Toller wrote:
wrote in message
oups.com...
I have been remodeling a 2 family home into a single family home which
had 2 main panels. I would like to make one panel into a subpanel but
am not sure how the grounding should be on the subpanel. Can I leave it
ground the way it is (as a main panel) or should it be ground to the
other main panel now? Any help would be greatly appreciated.

If you have to ask this, I sure wouldn't want to live in a house with your
wiring. Good luck with the inspector.


Thanks for your reply Toller. Now have fun signing in to yahoo.


Toller November 10th 06 12:15 AM

Main panel to main panel wiring in converting multi-family to single family dwelling
 

"cjo004" wrote in message
ups.com...

Toller wrote:
wrote in message
oups.com...
I have been remodeling a 2 family home into a single family home which
had 2 main panels. I would like to make one panel into a subpanel but
am not sure how the grounding should be on the subpanel. Can I leave it
ground the way it is (as a main panel) or should it be ground to the
other main panel now? Any help would be greatly appreciated.

If you have to ask this, I sure wouldn't want to live in a house with
your
wiring. Good luck with the inspector.


Thanks for your reply Toller. Now have fun signing in to yahoo.

I hope you will be living there!



John Gilmer November 10th 06 01:43 AM

Main panel to main panel wiring in converting multi-family to single family dwelling
 

wrote in message
oups.com...
I have been remodeling a 2 family home into a single family home which
had 2 main panels. I would like to make one panel into a subpanel but
am not sure how the grounding should be on the subpanel. Can I leave it
ground the way it is (as a main panel) or should it be ground to the
other main panel now? Any help would be greatly appreciated.


The quick and dirty approach is to just power both panels from ONE meter.

IF you want to turn a service panel into a sub-panel you have to separate
the GROUND buss from the NEUTRAL buss. And the NEUTRAL buss has to be
"floating" relative to the panel case. Odds are that many of your neutral
wires will not reach your new neutral buss.




Tekkie® November 10th 06 02:18 AM

Main panel to main panel wiring in converting multi-family to single family dwelling
 
posted for all of us...

I have been remodeling a 2 family home into a single family home which
had 2 main panels. I would like to make one panel into a subpanel but
am not sure how the grounding should be on the subpanel. Can I leave it
ground the way it is (as a main panel) or should it be ground to the
other main panel now? Any help would be greatly appreciated.


Asked and answered MANY times - do your own research.
--
Tekkie Don't bother to thank me, I do this as a public service.


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