chevyx92
Senior Member
- Location
- VA BCH, VA
I know you have to terminate isolated grounds on an isolated ground bar but I dont understand why you dont ground the isolated bar to any type of ground. Its seems to me that the ground is ineffective.
250.146(D) Isolated Receptacles. Where required for the reduction of electrical noise (electromagnetic interference) on the grounding circuit, a receptacle in which the grounding terminal is purposely insulated from the receptacle mounting means shall be permitted. The receptacle grounding terminal shall be grounded by an insulated equipment grounding conductor run with the circuit conductors. This grounding conductor shall be permitted to pass through one or more panelboards without connection to the panelboard grounding terminal as permitted in 408.20, Exception, so as to terminate within the same building or structure directly at an equipment grounding conductor terminal of the applicable derived system or service.
It would only have to be as large as the largest conductor on the bar.Originally posted by chevyx92:
So lets you have 20 isolated grounds coming back to the IG bar, how do size a ground to run from that IG bar to the main bonding jumper?
Don't you mean we must BOND the isolated grounding bar???Originally posted by iwire: You absolutely must ground the isolated grounding bar!
It says "directly at an equipment grounding conductor terminal of the applicable derived system ". Well if you bond the isolated ground bar back to the MDP equipment ground terminal, then isnt that the same thing as just bonding it to the equipment ground bar in the panel with the IG bar?250.146(D) Isolated Receptacles. Where required for the reduction of electrical noise (electromagnetic interference) on the grounding circuit, a receptacle in which the grounding terminal is purposely insulated from the receptacle mounting means shall be permitted. The receptacle grounding terminal shall be grounded by an insulated equipment grounding conductor run with the circuit conductors. This grounding conductor shall be permitted to pass through one or more panelboards without connection to the panelboard grounding terminal as permitted in 408.20, Exception, so as to terminate within the same building or structure directly at an equipment grounding conductor terminal of the applicable derived system or service.
Optical Isolation Modem is the best bet. Otherwise get away from signal protocols that use ground or grounded conductors as a signal path and avoid shielded cable. A good example of a bad signal protocol is RS-232 and coax mediums. Use ethernet.Originally posted by pierre:
Hello Derek
If one has 2 different CPUs that are plugged into 2 different receptacles, each receptacle being on a different phase and the Data cable between the 2 CPUs has a ground connection; other than installing them on the same circuit,how can that problem be alleviated?
