I'm planning a solar install for my house and received a wiring diagram from a solar company. I was wondering if someone could clarify as to why the ground is called out separately from the hot wires and why the gauge is different? After the junction box, the diagram calls out two sets of hot wires which I would wire with standard 10-2 ROMEX which includes a ground. For each junction box, there would be two 10-2 ROMEX cables and each one would contain a ground so there would be two #10 gauge ground conductors. I'm wondering if I can ignore the #8 gauge call out on the ground? Two #10 gauge grounds from the ROMEX equals about a #7 gauge wire so it seems like I'd be covered. If that's the case then I'm curious why that wasn't labeled as (2) #10 AWG CU GND THWN and why it called out #8 separately.
As a separate question, I'm going to be running the circuits to the solar array through the attic and then down an interior finished wall until I get to the basement. Would it be recommended to use MC cable since I won't be able support the cable inside the wall? From what I can tell from the NEC, I can run MC cable a few feet longer without support and it obviously protects the conductors better.
Thanks.

As a separate question, I'm going to be running the circuits to the solar array through the attic and then down an interior finished wall until I get to the basement. Would it be recommended to use MC cable since I won't be able support the cable inside the wall? From what I can tell from the NEC, I can run MC cable a few feet longer without support and it obviously protects the conductors better.
Thanks.
