Should there be continuity between neutral and ground in a sub panel?

The feed for your sub panel comes from your main panel the grounded conductor neutral and grounding conductor equipment ground are connected in the main panel so measuring continuity in a sub is normal even when the grounded conductor is isolated from the box and the grounding conductor.
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Should ground and neutral have continuity?

Once the outlet is connected to the wires in the wall (or plugged in in the OP's case) there will be continuity between ground and neutral because they are connected in your main breaker panel, but if the GFCI (or any other outlet) is just sitting on a table, they should not have continuity.
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Should ground and neutral be bonded in sub panel?

Here it is: Your ground and neutral wires definitely need to bond (or connect) together. But this is ONLY allowed in the main panel— never a subpanel, or anywhere else in the home.
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Why does the neutral and ground have to be separated at the sub panel?

With ground and neutral bonded, current can travel on both ground and neutral back to the main panel. If the load becomes unbalanced and ground and neutral are bonded, the current will flow through anything bonded to the sub-panel (enclosure, ground wire, piping, etc.) and back to the main panel. Obvious shock hazard!
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Should neutral and ground be separated?

The National Electrical Code (NEC) requirement for separated neutrals and grounding wires in a subpanel and separate neutral and grounding conductors back to the main panel, when both panels are in the same building, dates to the 1999 revision.
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Why Neutrals and Grounds are Separated in a Sub Panel



What happens if you don't separate grounds and neutrals?

Next, what' the deal with connecting grounds and neutrals together? In my words, if grounds and neutrals are connected together at a subpanel, they won't have separate paths back to the service equipment. This means you'll have current on the grounding conductor, which can be bad news for anyone working on the circuit.
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Can neutral and ground be connected together?

No, the neutral and ground should never be wired together. This is wrong, and potentially dangerous. When you plug in something in the outlet, the neutral will be live, as it closes the circuit. If the ground is wired to the neutral, the ground of the applicance will also be live.
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Can ground and neutral be on same bus bar?

If the main service panel happens to be the same place that the grounded (neutral) conductor is bonded to the grounding electrode, then there is no problem mixing grounds and neutrals on the same bus bar (as long as there is an appropriate number of conductors terminated under each lug).
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Where do you bond ground and neutral?

Neutral wires are usually connected at a neutral bus within panelboards or switchboards, and are "bonded" to earth ground at either the electrical service entrance, or at transformers within the system.
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Should a sub panel be grounded?

The sub panel neutral bar or terminal should not be bonded to the enclosure or the ground of the sub panel. The sub panel ground should not have a ground rod tied to it. The bonding for the main ground sources such as a ground rod is made at the main panel where all the grounds are bonded together as well.
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Why does a neutral bar float in a sub panel?

What's the purpose of the floating neutral in a sub-panel? To keep the current returning on the neutral from flowing through the exposed metal enclosure and pipes. mlarson: To keep the current returning on the neutral from flowing through the exposed metal enclosure and pipes.
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Do you bond the neutral in a subpanel?

The neutral and ground MUST NOT be bonded at a sub-panel. They should only be bonded at the main service panel. If you bond them anywhere other than the main service, the neutral return current now has multiple paths, including though your ground wire.
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Does neutral and earth have continuity?

What it basically means is yes there will be continuity because your main earth is connected to the suppliers neutral. There should be no interconnection beyond this point though. An electrician can do much more with specialized testers, but the choice is ultimately yours.
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What should neutral to ground read?

In most office environments, a typical reading of neutral-to-ground voltage is about 1.5V. If the reading is high (above 2V to 3V), then the branch circuit might be overloaded.
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Does a sub panel need a ground rod?

Yes, any sub panel outside of the main building requires it's own ground rod and a ground wire back to the main building.
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Why does my neutral wire have voltage?

The voltage you are seeing on the neutral wire is conducting through that other load from the hot. Your voltage tester is detecting voltage without drawing current so the resistance of the other load is not seen. Try disconnecting/turning off all other loads on that circuit.
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Why are the neutral and ground bonded at the main panel?

The reason we sometimes bond the neutral and ground wire in the main panel is for cost savings. There is no electrical engineering advantage in this bond; it is there because it is often cheaper to install a jumper wire than it is to route a ground wire all the way from the transformer to the panel.
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What is a floating neutral?

iTechworld portable generators are "floating neutral", meaning that the neutral circuit is not connected to the frame or to earth ground. This also means that both legs on the receptacle are hot legs, which is normal for floating neutral generators.
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Does a 240v sub panel need a neutral?

A 240v only panel has no need for a neutral, I have panels in a industrial facility with no neutral, but for residential my jurisdiction requires a 4 wire feed or 3 with conduit as a ground even for all 240v loads.
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What happens if neutral wire touches ground?

In Short if neutral wire touches a earth wire,

An earth wire carrying load current is a risk of electric shock because a person touching this earth may present an alternative path for the load current and thus the risk of electric shock.
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Does neutral wire carry current?

To sum up, a live wire carries the full load current, while a neutral wire carries some current, only when the loads are not balanced.
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How do you wire a neutral and ground in a breaker box?

On a main panel, you connect the ground wire from the new cable and the neutral (white) pigtail from the AFCI to the neutral bus. Route the AFCI neutral pigtail and ground wires to empty screws on the neutral bus and tighten.
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