Functionally I think it is fine. I don't know if it meets the code. Others will likely chime in. If you are having an electrician install and a building inspector inspect you need to make sure both of them are ok with it.
Sharing ground wire between two dedicated circuits
Planning to install two dedicated 20amp circuits with Romex 10/3 and 10/2 Cable. The run is about 70 feet. Have learned that the 10/3 as an insulated ground versus 10/2 which has a ground wire but it's not insulated.
Idea has been proposed to share the insulated ground from the 10/3 wire with the other 10/2 dedicated circuit. Achieves the same thing at a lot less cost? Does this make sense?
As long as both circuits originate from the same panel you can share the ground -- if your jurisdiction uses NEC 2014 or later. Note that 10/3 Romex has three uninsulated wires (black, white, red) and a bare ground, 4 wires total. The insulated red wire you are making a ground must be wrapped with green electrical tape where visible (in the outlet box, panel or any intermediary junction box). If you are using metal boxes, you can use the bare ground clipped/screwed to the 10/3 box and the insulated (taped green) conductor on the 10/3 receptacle ground screw. You can then tie the 10/2 ground from the 10/2 receptacle (or metal box ) to the 10/3 box. If plastic boxes, then run the #10 insulated "ground" from receptacle screw to screw and clip the bare grounds back to the orange insulation.
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@emergingsoul If you’re going to spend this kind of money for two dedicated circuits, why not just spend a tiny bit more for the best? If they are truly dedicated circuits, with dedicated circuit breakers, their grounds should both never intercept with each other, until they reach the circuit breaker box (aka load center). Instead of using Romex, go a step further, and use Aluminum Armor Clad for Healthcare Facilities (AC-HCF). It’s the absolute best choice for Isolated Ground A/V systems. The biggest benefit is that the average proximity of the hot conductor and the neutral conductor, with respect to the isolated equipment grounding conductor, is nearly equal, virtually eliminating ground voltage induction (GVI), even on long runs. If you go that (AC-HCF) route, I’d also use isolated ground outlets. |
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@emergingsoul said:
No not to me it doesn’t. Per NEC the EGC, "(Equipment Grounding Conductor), shall be installed in the same raceway, or cable, as the branch circuit conductors. You are planing on using the EGC of the 10/3 NM cable, (Romex is a trade name), for the EGC in the 10/2 NM cable. Just curious what’s your reasoning or importance for the EGC being insulated in a PVC jacketed cable. The EGC has one purpose. To carry ground fault current back to the source. You didn’t say what type of outlets you are going to use. IF you are planing on using IG, (Isolated Ground), outlets they would not serve any purpose whats so ever connected to MN cable. None... I assume you will be hiring an electrician to do the wiring project. A reputable Licensed Electrician will not do what you want to do with the green taped insulated EGC from the 10/3 NM cable. Just use 10/2 NM for both branch circuits or better use 10/2 solid aluminum armored MC cable. The EGC is insulated green in color. The three conductors are tightly twisted spiral its entire length. Very tightly twisted... Example Aluminum Armored 10/2 MC cable. (Tell the Electrician yo want solid core conductors only...) Southwire Armorlite 250-ft 10 / 2 Solid Aluminum Mc CableYou can also use plastic boxes for the outlets instead of steel boxes if you want. It meets NEC code. With that said the AHJ, (Authority Having Jurisdiction), has the final say. Your electrician will know... / / / / / Integrating Electronic Equipment and Power into Rack ...Go to page 12 and page 13
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It’s not clear what you’re trying to say. A ground loop occurs when there are two or more paths to ground at different potential (voltage). You can have a dozen ground paths and if they’re all at the same potential you’ll have no issue. In the US, a residential system’s safety ground will be bonded to the service panel’s neutral buss bar, which is also bonded to the electric utility’s neutral.
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@fuzztone Wrote:
Nothing wrong with Non Metallic cable AKA Romex, in my opinion, steel armored Metal Clad cable, with steel receptacle boxes is better for dedicated audio circuits. Example: better shielding from electric fields and radio frequency interference.😎 Mike |
The EGC, (Equipment Grounding Conductor), is for safety. In the event of a HOT to chassis fault it carries the ground fault current back to the source. Not all equipment uses an EGC conductor. How about a piece of digital equipment that has a cheap SMPS that is fed by 2 wire only, (Hot and Neutral conductors), that does not use an EGC. "All that noise and crap" travels back out on the AC mains. Even if the equipment uses an EGC "All that noise and crap" still travels back out on the AC mains.
Where did you hear the EGC did that? IF there is noise and crap it is carried by the circuit Hot and neutral current carrying conductors. The insulation covering building electrical wiring has a 600V rating. The insulation does not prevent magnetic fields created by a current carrying conductor from passing through the insulation. The purpose of insulation is to safely contain the HOT voltage potential from passing through the insulation to another HOT conductor, or a grounded object, or the neutral, the grounded conductor. If you are looking for insulation on the bare EGC in Romex the bare conductor is wrapped in an insulating paper material and is encased in the outer non conductive PVC jacket of the Romex cable.
/ / / / / Quote from the late Henry Ott: Grounding Myths
Who is Henry Ott? .
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Many audio-enthusiast’s, who previously didn’t know anything about audio equipment, and the interconnection between it, think that just by spending tens of thousands of dollars on the best audio equipment, should automatically make them know everything about AC power, audio equipment, and how to hook it up (and make them an audiophile). Not always the case.
Correct, but your questions are not simple ones, so they take some explaining. Yes, it can be frustrating for some. |