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    Robertthea's Avatar
    Robertthea Posts: 12, Reputation: 1
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    #1

    Apr 9, 2007, 04:46 PM
    220v Circuit to Barn - 3 or 4 strands?
    Hello,
    I've strung a 155 foot 2-2/4 underground aluminum cable in conduit 155 feet and 36 inches underground from my barn to the panel in my home which I plan to upgrade from 100 to 200 amps soon. Now, after the trench is filled, my neighbor tells me I must have 4 stands, not three for this circuit, with an extra ground wire?

    Can anyone elighten me? Is this true? If so, why the heck would I need an extra ground? I'd hate to run yet another wire after running and burning the exisinting cable already.
    :confused:
    electrocuda's Avatar
    electrocuda Posts: 3, Reputation: 1
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    #2

    Apr 9, 2007, 04:55 PM
    Quote Originally Posted by Robertthea
    Hello,
    I've strung a 155 foot 2-2/4 underground aluminum cable in conduit 155 feet and 36 inches underground from my barn to the panel in my home which I plan to upgrade from 100 to 200 amps soon. Now, after the trench is filled, my neighbor tells me I must have 4 stands, not three for this circuit, with an extra ground wire??

    Can anyone elighten me?? Is this true?? If so, why the heck would I need an extra ground?? I'd hate to run yet another wire after running and buring the exisinting cable already.
    :confused:
    Three strands will be fine if you drive a ground rod at your new panel(barn). The three strands then will be two for each hot leg and one for neutral, in most house applications around here they only run three wires and a water pipe and the ground rod act as the grounding means. So all should be fine, please be careful...
    Robertthea's Avatar
    Robertthea Posts: 12, Reputation: 1
    New Member
     
    #3

    Apr 9, 2007, 05:48 PM
    Quote Originally Posted by electrocuda
    three strands will be fine if you drive a ground rod at your new panel(barn). The three strands then will be two for each hot leg and one for neutral, in most house applications around here they only run three wires and a water pipe and the ground rod act as the grounding means. So all should be fine, please be carefull..............
    Thanks. Seemed to me that the three strands were adequate, notwithstanding the ground rod. I promise to be careful and will be calling a qualified person to hook up the circuit.

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