Do you remeber in the movie "One flew over the cukoo's nest" when their playing blackjack? Every cigarette is worth a dime, and Danny Devito keeps breaking the cigarettes and calling them nickels until Jack Nichloson intervenes by saying that "...a broken smoke isn't a nickel...it's sh*t...try and smoke it".
Same concept here.
You need to buy a lug for this. They are cheap and readily available.
Ryan is right, go to whoever sold you the panel and tell them what you need. Of course if it was bought from a home improvement center they may tell you to trim the strands, DON'T LISTEN to this.
Sqare D makes a lug that fits into two ajacent positions on the bar and can accommodate up to a (I think)#4 conductor. Other manufacturers probably do too.
along that same line, Is there a ampacity rating for that nuetral bar? I saw a 200 amp 30 space MLO QO 240 volt panel with a 200 main disconnect feed 5 100 amp panels in a residential home. Of course the panel did not have the neutral terminal lugs for this, so the installer put two #2 lugs with nuetrals on one side of the nuetral bar and two on the other side. Alwayso wondered about that.
I am a little confused. In the earlier posts, you state that you can buy a lug to terminate that neutral into. I checked square D's website, and they make a large lug that can be attached to any nuetral bar. You just have to take out two screws. So I guess I still wonder!
Thanks!
The only thing that I can find is on page 116 of the (1999) UL "white book", that states exactly what we have been discussing...one wire per lug, unless identified otherwise.
Sorry, I wish I had a better answer for you. Anyone else?
OK, I would never do this because I'm well aware of the inexpensive step-up lugs, but I'll play devil's advocate I guess.
Splitting it among two holes would still have only 1 wire per hole.
Unless the lug was specifically rated for 14, 12, 10, 8, 6, and 4 AWG instead of rated 14 thru 4 AWG and half of that larger conductor was betwen 14 and 4 AWG, how would that violate 110.3(B)?
Let me ask you though, if you call half of a conductor "one wire", what size is it? I don't there is such a thing as "half a wire". You either have a conductor, or you do not.
If you seperate the conuctor, a larger amount of current would flow on one of the conductors in respect to the other, wouldn't it?
I'll side with fishin electrician for argument , a # 6 wire for instance has several strands. if someone splits these strands and make two wires out of one and place each "wire" under differant screws what code does this violate?
I agree that we don't know what size it is, but a 2AWG split in half will certainly be between a 14 and a 4. I can't find an NEC definition of a conductor, only a distinction between bare, covered and insulated. I still don't see a violation of 110.3(B)
I also agree that more current would flow in one of the seperated sections than the other. With an odd number of strands you can't get it split directly in half but, I don't see the danger in these unequally sized ?" long sections of the conductor as the current would be proportional to the two differing sizes. Nor do I see a violation.
If you alter the wire then you are altering the cir. mils.why just not tap approriate sized wire on it.Tap rule still appies.Wired in # 6 and a 30 amp breaker is needed to max. out a/c comp. so tap with # 10 ...Why try to alter ???