 | | | Hooking up hot-tub.why would there be no ground?
Asked Nov 3, 2007, 09:19 AM
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11 Answers Hello,
I was recently given a dimension one hot tub from a friend, and have started wiring it up. When I disconnected it from his house, the electric job seemed very nice. There was 8 gauge THHN going to the disconnect/GFCI box, and 6 gauge from there to the main panel. What was weird, though, is that there were only three wires-black, white, and green. The control panel in the tub showed me that there was a connection block for a ground, but it wasn't being used.
Since I brought the tub to my house, I purchased 130' each of green, black, and white THHN that I plan on running through conduit underground until I get into my house.
I am unclear on two things...first, why was there no ground on the previous installation? Do I need to purchase another ground wire to run along to the main panel, or is that not necessary for some reason I am missing? If so, does it also need to be 6 gauge?
Second question is, once I am in my house, does code still require conduit, or can I bundle the wires together and secure them to the beams in my basement ceiling?
Thanks! Thread Summary |
11 Answers
 | Uber Member | |
Nov 3, 2007, 05:05 PM
| | | I'm confused. No Ground? Green is normally ground.
The conduit can act as ground.
120V or 240 V Hot tub. Seems like 120 with white/black/green.
THNN must be protected. No stapling in the rafters. | | |  | Über Member | |
Nov 3, 2007, 06:13 PM
| | | If everything is 240, you could have black hot, white the other hot, and green ground. If you have both 120 and 240, you could depend on metallic conduit for the ground, but the green couldn't be either the neutral or the other hot.
Oh, you can't count on the way it was being right. | | |  | New Member | |
Nov 3, 2007, 06:56 PM
| | | Thanks for the responses.
I am in NY, and the model is the Chairman II, I believe the 1999 Model. The way it was hooked up before, Green and Black were hots, white was neutral. Nothing was touching the ground at all.
No stapling in rafters..that means I need to run conduit inside, I assume?
I am using PVC conduit, so that's no good for ground. What about a grounding rod?
Thanks again for the replies...I will check in the electrical forum about the distance of the wiring...although I already bought the 6 gauge and as it is it cost me a small fortune... | | |  | Uber Member | |
Nov 3, 2007, 07:53 PM
| | | You can't tuck THNN in the rafters, but you can run your conduit to a junction box and run NMB the rest of the way.
So, does this mean it's a 4-wire 240 V system: L1 (Blk), L2(Red), N(Wht) and Gnd(green) or a 3 wire 240V system L1(Blk), L2(Red), Gnd(Green) or a 120V system L(Blk), N(Wht), Gnd(Green)?
Remember that you can tape the ends of the wire the effective color of the wire. | | |  | New Member | |
Nov 3, 2007, 08:08 PM
| | | It's definitely a 240V system...I didn't know that it could be only three wires, though...I know the tub's control system has space for four wires..but does that mean it needs them?
If I switch to NMB the rest of the way, how do I deal with the ground? Would the smaller gauge ground wire that comes bundled in the NMB be sufficient? | | |  | Uber Member | |
Nov 3, 2007, 08:37 PM
| | | If there is a space for 4, it's probably 4. The tub's controls are probably 120 volts and you need a neutral for the 120 volt stuff to operate.
Here is an example spa wiring: http://barefootspas.com/pdf/WiringDiagramSiemens.pdf
Ground is not supposed to carry current and therefore it can be a thinner wire than the current carrying conductors. Neutral only carries the difference of the L1 and L2 currents, but I don't know if N can be re-sized in this application.
As an example: Suppose the controls are 1 amp @ 120 V and the 240 volt heaters are 39A. L1 might be 40 A, L2 39 A and Neutral would be 1 AMP. Ground would be zero AMPS unless there was a fault. | | |  | New Member | |
Nov 4, 2007, 05:09 PM
| | | Yes...my tub has all four just like that, in that order. Hot, Neutral, Ground Hot from top to bottom.
As far as the ground being able to be thinner...how thin can I go? 8? 10?
Thanks,
David | | | | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | | | | Add your answer here.
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