isolated grounding conductor

Dale001289

Senior Member
Location
Georgia
Does the NEC allow a single, isolated grounding conductor to be routed (from the same panelboard) between several IG receptacles or does each receptacle require its own isolated grounding conductor?
 
You can use a single IG for multiple circuits just like a non-IG EGC. I've heard some argue that it won't be as effective using only one but the NEC doesn't care as this is a design parameter not a code requirement.
 
I suspect more will argue that they're not effective at all (given how and where they're often used).
I agree. There is 0 benefit in 2025. Unless told otherwise I would use a single IG for as many circuits as I could to waste as little money as possible.
 
Skipping the rules part.
The IG conductor should follow the same path as the Hot & Neutral conductors.
The best plan is to Star out from a central junction box to all the receptacles and then a single cable back to the panel.
 
We are using the 2017 NEC on this project - 517.16 talks to IGR’s.
But this is in reference to patient care so it probably doesn’t apply anyway
Going off of memory - the IG receptacles are not allowed in patient care areas because they defeat the purpose of redundancy, i.e. the IG receptacle in the patient care area are more dangerous.
 
Skipping the rules part.
The IG conductor should follow the same path as the Hot & Neutral conductors.
The best plan is to Star out from a central junction box to all the receptacles and then a single cable back to the panel.
How about if we take one IG per circuit (to several receptacles) along with one EGC per circuit for along the same route from the panelboard ground bus?
 
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