wbalsam1
Senior Member
- Location
- Upper Jay, NY
I have three 208/120 volt 3 phase panels mounted side by side on a wall in an electrical room. They are each interconnected by various sized conduit nipples.
Some of the branch circuits in the far-right panelboard need to be routed through the middle panelboard and into the far-left panelboard. The phase conductors are of adequate length to reach, but the grounded conductors have been previously terminated in the far-right panelboard and are not long enough to reach without being either wire-nutted or butt-spliced in the far-right panelboard.
This brings me to my question: since there are available spaces to terminate on the grounded conductor terminal (neutral bar), instead of wire-nutting or butt-splicing, could I use the terminal bar to connect additional grounded conductors from one panelboard to another? Or would this be too confusing to an electrician working on this panelboard in the future? Hope my question is clear.
Some of the branch circuits in the far-right panelboard need to be routed through the middle panelboard and into the far-left panelboard. The phase conductors are of adequate length to reach, but the grounded conductors have been previously terminated in the far-right panelboard and are not long enough to reach without being either wire-nutted or butt-spliced in the far-right panelboard.
This brings me to my question: since there are available spaces to terminate on the grounded conductor terminal (neutral bar), instead of wire-nutting or butt-splicing, could I use the terminal bar to connect additional grounded conductors from one panelboard to another? Or would this be too confusing to an electrician working on this panelboard in the future? Hope my question is clear.