San Jacinto
New member
Ok, I've searched to the ends of the Internet, reading various forums and I *think* I know the answer to this question, but I would like to put it out there to any professional electricians who may be reading.
First, here's my setup for my backup power to the house during power outages:
Main panel in house with manual safety interlock switch connected to a Reliance PB30 L14-30P power inlet on the outside wall for connection to the backup generator. The generator #1 used for powering the home is configured neutral floating, so neutral/ground is in the main panel. The only 220V circuits in the house are the Central AC and the submersible deep well pump. (Well pump and Air conditioning breakers are shut down when on generator power - no way my 9000 watt model could power a 5 ton unit and a well)
The well house is about 50 feet from the house/main panel and I have a second generator that I would prefer to dedicate to running the 1.5HP submersible. There is a sub panel installed in the well house that feeds the pump. The sub panel does not have a main breaker for the 4-wire feed coming from the main house. It is a properly configured panel, neutral and ground are NOT bonded here. In addition to the 220V for the well, there is one 110V outlet for the well UV disinfection light.
What I would like to do is replace the well house sub panel with something that has a main breaker I can shut down, and wire in an identical Reliance power inlet to connect generator #2. Note: generator #2 is also configured as neutral floating. As previously mentioned the well pump breaker in the main panel is OFF when running generator #1 on the main panel at the house. Running generator #2 at the well would still be energizing the 50 feet of wire from the well house BACK to the well breaker at the main panel. Doesn't seem right and I'm sure it violates code.
Now that we have that out of the way, here's the ultimate question - is there any reason two independent generators can (or cannot) share a common neutral/ground bond back in the main panel? If they cannot or should not, then I will need to wire up a second panel for the well that is completely isolated from the main when running the well generator. I think a full blown transfer switch is overkill for a well pump and single outlet. If it weren't for the single 110V circuit in the well shed, I wouldn't care about the neutral issue if I was just powering the 220V well pump.
Few things before anyone asks why two generators - I want the generator #2 as close as I can get it to well, which is why I'm not attempting to power the well from the main panel. I'm cutting out 50-feet of current loss. There a long thread about this in the forums.
First, here's my setup for my backup power to the house during power outages:
Main panel in house with manual safety interlock switch connected to a Reliance PB30 L14-30P power inlet on the outside wall for connection to the backup generator. The generator #1 used for powering the home is configured neutral floating, so neutral/ground is in the main panel. The only 220V circuits in the house are the Central AC and the submersible deep well pump. (Well pump and Air conditioning breakers are shut down when on generator power - no way my 9000 watt model could power a 5 ton unit and a well)
The well house is about 50 feet from the house/main panel and I have a second generator that I would prefer to dedicate to running the 1.5HP submersible. There is a sub panel installed in the well house that feeds the pump. The sub panel does not have a main breaker for the 4-wire feed coming from the main house. It is a properly configured panel, neutral and ground are NOT bonded here. In addition to the 220V for the well, there is one 110V outlet for the well UV disinfection light.
What I would like to do is replace the well house sub panel with something that has a main breaker I can shut down, and wire in an identical Reliance power inlet to connect generator #2. Note: generator #2 is also configured as neutral floating. As previously mentioned the well pump breaker in the main panel is OFF when running generator #1 on the main panel at the house. Running generator #2 at the well would still be energizing the 50 feet of wire from the well house BACK to the well breaker at the main panel. Doesn't seem right and I'm sure it violates code.
Now that we have that out of the way, here's the ultimate question - is there any reason two independent generators can (or cannot) share a common neutral/ground bond back in the main panel? If they cannot or should not, then I will need to wire up a second panel for the well that is completely isolated from the main when running the well generator. I think a full blown transfer switch is overkill for a well pump and single outlet. If it weren't for the single 110V circuit in the well shed, I wouldn't care about the neutral issue if I was just powering the 220V well pump.
Few things before anyone asks why two generators - I want the generator #2 as close as I can get it to well, which is why I'm not attempting to power the well from the main panel. I'm cutting out 50-feet of current loss. There a long thread about this in the forums.