First off I would like to apologize for the can of worms I am about to open up as this has been discussed in depth in other threads. That being said, I have a unique situation. Please read the entire thread as there are many important details regarding my electrical setup.
First, I have a "Distribution" type setup. That means that power comes from the utility to a pole in my yard where there is a meter and a breaker panel box that has the neutral and ground bonded. The ground goes down to a ground rod in the ground which I will upgrade to two ground rods X number of feet apart to meet code.
So from that pole power splits off on four different sets of cables that go to my house, my shop, my shed, and now my generator (via an interlock kit). The shop has the ground and neutral buses BONDED; so does the shed. In the house panel the ground and neutral are UNBONDED. The grounding wire goes up into the attic, down the inside of a wall, and to what I can only guess a black iron propane line. The problem with this setup is that sometime in the last 50+ years, someone replaced the gas inlet line going into the house with either PVC or plastic coated steel. Thus the ground is poor; around 80-100 ohms.
Important note! All the power cables on my property are 3 wire INCLUDING the steel leader cable holding the aerials up. That means there are two insulated cables to carry the 240V and the non-insulated steel cable holding up the aerial is my neutral.
I have already asked two separate electrician neighbors of mine and although they agree that my setup is outdated and wrong, they disagree on a proper solution. Obviously the most correct thing to do would be to run a fourth wire to each of my buildings to provide a separate path for the ground back to the panel on the service pole. However, that would require me running 500 feet of heavy gauge wire, half of it underground. That's something that my wallet and calendar simply won't allow.
Question time!
1) In my unique case, should I drive a separate ground rod in the ground for the generator and remove the bonding bus bar inside the generator or should I leave the bus bar in place (either with or without a ground rod). Remember, only three wire service.
2) Should I bond the ground and neutral at the house panel or drive a proper ground rod to act as better grounding for the house.
First, I have a "Distribution" type setup. That means that power comes from the utility to a pole in my yard where there is a meter and a breaker panel box that has the neutral and ground bonded. The ground goes down to a ground rod in the ground which I will upgrade to two ground rods X number of feet apart to meet code.
So from that pole power splits off on four different sets of cables that go to my house, my shop, my shed, and now my generator (via an interlock kit). The shop has the ground and neutral buses BONDED; so does the shed. In the house panel the ground and neutral are UNBONDED. The grounding wire goes up into the attic, down the inside of a wall, and to what I can only guess a black iron propane line. The problem with this setup is that sometime in the last 50+ years, someone replaced the gas inlet line going into the house with either PVC or plastic coated steel. Thus the ground is poor; around 80-100 ohms.
Important note! All the power cables on my property are 3 wire INCLUDING the steel leader cable holding the aerials up. That means there are two insulated cables to carry the 240V and the non-insulated steel cable holding up the aerial is my neutral.
I have already asked two separate electrician neighbors of mine and although they agree that my setup is outdated and wrong, they disagree on a proper solution. Obviously the most correct thing to do would be to run a fourth wire to each of my buildings to provide a separate path for the ground back to the panel on the service pole. However, that would require me running 500 feet of heavy gauge wire, half of it underground. That's something that my wallet and calendar simply won't allow.
Question time!
1) In my unique case, should I drive a separate ground rod in the ground for the generator and remove the bonding bus bar inside the generator or should I leave the bus bar in place (either with or without a ground rod). Remember, only three wire service.
2) Should I bond the ground and neutral at the house panel or drive a proper ground rod to act as better grounding for the house.