Steve’s Electric
Member
- Location
- Baltimore, Maryland
- Occupation
- Electrician
Hello, this is my first post. I would like some opinions on this method of transferring over to an Optional Standby Panel that is fed from a portable generator. I saw this in a how-to book written back in the 1970’s. The author, an electrician, said he had done this all across the Florida Panhandle which is a region prone to lighting strikes and power outages. I don’t have the book anymore but I have tried to it describe it as best as I can remember. And I am trying to make sure it complies with the NEC. At first glance it looks like a very dangerous back-feed installation by a homeowner who thought he was an electrician.
But in my opinion it may solve a number of issues. The Standby Panel is a standard 100 Amp main lug only sub panel which is mounted next to the Service Panel.
Because of this method the floating neutral block in the Standby Panel (sub panel) will be completely isolated from the Service Panel’s bonded neutral during Standby mode and this allows the neutral in the portable generator to be bonded to the generator frame (which I think most of them are) and makes the generator a Separately Derived System.
The Standby panel has a 4 wire 50 Amp Range Cord connected to it’s main lugs, floating neutral block and bonded ground block. This cord is plugged back and forth between a receptacle fed from the Service panel and a receptacle which is fed from the generator. Normally this change would be done by switches or by a relay.
A #4 solid copper wire could bond the Standby Panel to the Service Equipment Panel which will keep the Equipment Grounding System intact. Or this could be done with a 2” steel nipple that is used to take the hots and neutrals spliced from selected circuits in the Service Panel and taken over to breakers in the Standby Panel.The only thing in common between the 2 panels during the Standby mode is the equipment grounding. Grounding conductors related to circuits taken from the Service Panel would remain in the Service Panel.
The receptacles are 2 50 Amp NEMA 14-50R within reach of the range cord from the Standby panel. One is fed from a 50 Amp breaker in the Service Panel for normal use. The other is from the generator and is fed through the the wall from outdoors from a 30 Amp L14-30 twist-lock inlet in a weatherproof housing that the generator cord plugs into.
Instead of going to the main lugs to feed the Standby Panel the range cord could feed the Standby Panel through a 50 Amp 2 pole breaker with a “hold down” clip.
The range cord hangs out of the bottom of the Standby Panel and is plugged back and forth between the 2 50Amp receptacles.
The generator has over current protection built in. The twist-lock inlet outdoors is the disconnect. The generator does not need a ground rod.
Cords are allowed for “frequent interchange”. And an example can be mentioned that Mobil Homes are fed with 50 Amp cords.
Maybe some of you are already familiar with this idea.
Please give me some opinions. This seems like it could be accomplished with one trip to the home improvement store if they had the proper size twist lock inlet for your generator and the cord. Most often 20 or 30 Amp. I tried to post a drawing, it didn’t seem to work.
But in my opinion it may solve a number of issues. The Standby Panel is a standard 100 Amp main lug only sub panel which is mounted next to the Service Panel.
Because of this method the floating neutral block in the Standby Panel (sub panel) will be completely isolated from the Service Panel’s bonded neutral during Standby mode and this allows the neutral in the portable generator to be bonded to the generator frame (which I think most of them are) and makes the generator a Separately Derived System.
The Standby panel has a 4 wire 50 Amp Range Cord connected to it’s main lugs, floating neutral block and bonded ground block. This cord is plugged back and forth between a receptacle fed from the Service panel and a receptacle which is fed from the generator. Normally this change would be done by switches or by a relay.
A #4 solid copper wire could bond the Standby Panel to the Service Equipment Panel which will keep the Equipment Grounding System intact. Or this could be done with a 2” steel nipple that is used to take the hots and neutrals spliced from selected circuits in the Service Panel and taken over to breakers in the Standby Panel.The only thing in common between the 2 panels during the Standby mode is the equipment grounding. Grounding conductors related to circuits taken from the Service Panel would remain in the Service Panel.
The receptacles are 2 50 Amp NEMA 14-50R within reach of the range cord from the Standby panel. One is fed from a 50 Amp breaker in the Service Panel for normal use. The other is from the generator and is fed through the the wall from outdoors from a 30 Amp L14-30 twist-lock inlet in a weatherproof housing that the generator cord plugs into.
Instead of going to the main lugs to feed the Standby Panel the range cord could feed the Standby Panel through a 50 Amp 2 pole breaker with a “hold down” clip.
The range cord hangs out of the bottom of the Standby Panel and is plugged back and forth between the 2 50Amp receptacles.
The generator has over current protection built in. The twist-lock inlet outdoors is the disconnect. The generator does not need a ground rod.
Cords are allowed for “frequent interchange”. And an example can be mentioned that Mobil Homes are fed with 50 Amp cords.
Maybe some of you are already familiar with this idea.
Please give me some opinions. This seems like it could be accomplished with one trip to the home improvement store if they had the proper size twist lock inlet for your generator and the cord. Most often 20 or 30 Amp. I tried to post a drawing, it didn’t seem to work.