pclausen
Veteran Member
I have a #6 ground and #4 neutral between generator and transfer switch. I have #6 ground from generator to optional ground rod.Ground rod at generator is optional. I have seen it engineered and passed with a ground rod, and without. You are required to have both a neutral and ground from the generator to the transfer switch.
So I do not need to add a #6 ground from generator ground to house ground rod, correct?
And this is allowed even though I have moved 14 breakers from this panel to the sub-panel behind the transfer switch?The non transfered panel can have neutrals and grounds on the same bar, with a main bonding jumper, fed from the meter with SEU cable (2 hots and a ground).
That's what I have now. The ground is not part of the SER cable, but a bare #6 between the transfer switch ground bar and the newly added ground bar in the sub-panel.The transferred panel is now a sub-panel, neutrals and grounds should be separate, no main bonding jumper, fed from the transfer switch with SER cable (2 hots, neutral, and ground).
My transfer switch is SE rated and has the main bonding jumper intact. The only thing missing from the service panel, is a #6 ground to the house grounding rod. It is currently indirectly connected to the house grounding rod via the #6 between it and the sub-panel, which in turn is connected to the house grounding rod.The transfer switch (which needs to be service entrance rated in this case), is now the main breaker for the transfered panel, and should have a main bonding jumper, fed from the meter base with SEU cable.