Just finished installing a battery backup system for a customer. We have a dedicated "backed-up loads" panel to supply critical loads during grid outages. One of the 120 V circuits the customer wants backed up is on a multi-wire branch circuit and the other half has loads that we do not want to back up because they will draw more power than the inverter can handle during backup. Line 1 circuit = kitchen outlets (want to back up) ; Line 2 = Dishwasher + Garbage Disposal (do not want to back up)
We subbed out the AC work for moving the circuits from the main panel to the backed up loads panel. The existing wiring for the MW branch circuit is 12/3 NM from the main panel to the loads. The AC electrician used 12/2 to extend the Line 1 conductor of the MW branch circuit from the main panel over to the new breaker in the backed-up loads panel.
For the neutral of the 12/2 extension circuit between panels they left the 12/3 MW branch circuit neutral landed on the neutral bus of the main panel and ran the neutral of the 12/2 extension circuit from the neutral bus in the main panel to the neutral bus in the backed up loads panel.
Question 1: Anyone see any NEC code violations here with the MW branch circuit L1 breaker in the backed up loads panel, the L2 breaker in the main panel, and the neutral for the circuit extended between each panel's neutral bus?
Question 2: Any way that during back up mode the neutral return current might find it's way back onto the utility. At first glance I don't see how this could happen, the current will want to flow back to the source (inverter) but the electrician is now second guessing this wiring and concerned that we could potentially backfeed power from the neutral onto the utility transformer. Anyone see any concerns, electrically speaking (not code), with how this would operate?
We subbed out the AC work for moving the circuits from the main panel to the backed up loads panel. The existing wiring for the MW branch circuit is 12/3 NM from the main panel to the loads. The AC electrician used 12/2 to extend the Line 1 conductor of the MW branch circuit from the main panel over to the new breaker in the backed-up loads panel.
For the neutral of the 12/2 extension circuit between panels they left the 12/3 MW branch circuit neutral landed on the neutral bus of the main panel and ran the neutral of the 12/2 extension circuit from the neutral bus in the main panel to the neutral bus in the backed up loads panel.
Question 1: Anyone see any NEC code violations here with the MW branch circuit L1 breaker in the backed up loads panel, the L2 breaker in the main panel, and the neutral for the circuit extended between each panel's neutral bus?
Question 2: Any way that during back up mode the neutral return current might find it's way back onto the utility. At first glance I don't see how this could happen, the current will want to flow back to the source (inverter) but the electrician is now second guessing this wiring and concerned that we could potentially backfeed power from the neutral onto the utility transformer. Anyone see any concerns, electrically speaking (not code), with how this would operate?