Why are neutral and ground tied together?

It is common on larger systems to monitor any current flowing through the neutral-to-earth link and use this as the basis for neutral fault protection. The connection between neutral and earth allows any phase-to-earth fault to develop enough current flow to "trip" the circuit overcurrent protection device.
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Can I tie my neutral and ground 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 neutral and ground be connected together in main panel?

The answer is never. Grounds and neutrals should only be connected at the last point of disconnect. This would be at main panels only.
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Can neutral and ground be the same?

a ground and a neutral are both wires. unless they're tied together with other circuits, and not a 'home run' back to the panel, there is no difference between the two where they both end up on the same bus bar in the box.
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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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Why Neutrals



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 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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Why am I getting 120 volts on my neutral?

If you have a neutral wire removed from the neutral bus bar in your panel it is possible to see 120VAC on that wire if the circuit breaker for that circuit is turned on and there is a load connected to the circuit and load device is also turned on.
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Why is there no voltage on neutral?

In electrical engineering, when we say the voltage at point X is V, we actually are measuring the voltage between point X and an implicit other point called "ground". In the electric power grid, "neutral" is ground, by definition. So the voltage of the neutral wire is always zero... By definition.
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What is a floating neutral in wiring?

A “floating” neutral occurs when the connection to the ground breaks or becomes loose, which causes the neutral bar to “float.” This can happen in your panel or between the utility and your electric panel. It can be caused by a mechanical issue or other issues like rust or corrosion.
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Why does a subpanel need 4 wires?

The neutral and ground are not bonded in the subpanel. In this setup if a hot wire coming in contact with the non-current carrying parts of the electrical system, (outlet covers, panel covers etc), the 4th ground conductor will provide a low resistance patch back to the source tripping a breaker.
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Does a subpanel need to be grounded to the main panel?

Most panels come with a bar joining the two, which is easily removed. Code requires subpanels to have a ground connection that's independent of the main panel's.
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Does a subpanel in the same building need a ground rod?

You must, must, must, in every case run a ground ~ from the main to the subpanel. Doesn't matter if you're running it 3 feet, to an outbuilding or up a space elevator. You have to run a ground ~ or you are out of Code.
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Why does 240V need a neutral?

The grounded (neutral) conductor is connected to the center of the coil (center tap), which is why it provides half the voltage. Therefore, if a device requires only 240V, only two ungrounded (hot) conductors are required to supply the device.
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What happens if neutral is not connected?

If a neutral wire gets disconnected, then the appliances will not work, the fan may get burn, choke in the tube may burn, and current starts flowing through the neutral wire. If you insert the tester in the neutral point (socket) then it will indicate like a phase.
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What happens if the neutral is not grounded in the case of single line to ground fault?

If there were no any grounded neutral, no fault current would have been flow. We will apply Kirchhof's voltage law here to find the fault current. As fault current is only flowing in the faulted phase A, therefore we are only interested in finding Ia.
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Can you get a shock off the neutral wire?

So even the current returns through neutral (only from a connected load that completes the current flow circuit) you touching the neutral with a 0V cant get you a shock. But its not safe to touch neutral wire!
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Does current flow from neutral to live?

The neutral wire completes the circuit, giving a return path for the current. Similarly, when the current flows in the live wire, it flows out the neutral. At any given time, whatever current flows through the live wire, an equal amount (*note 2) flows in the opposite direction through the neutral wire.
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Why is my neutral wire hot?

If the neutral is disconnected anywhere between the light bulb and the panel, then the neutral from the light to the point of the break in the neutral will become hot (and the device will be unpowered, because no current will be flowing through it). Look for a disconnected neutral.
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Why would a neutral wire be live?

Since the neutral wire is a potential between all three phases, each phase along with the neutral wire can form an independent circuit e.g your house, hence live and neutral. It is the role of the neutral wire to carry any current as a result of the imbalance in impedance of each of the phases loads.
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Does neutral wire have power?

To summarize: the hot wire carries electricity from the power supply and takes it to the load (lightbulb). Neutral wires take the used electricity from the load and bring it back to the power supply.
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Why would a ground wire have power?

The grounding wire does not carry electricity under normal circuit operations. It's purpose is to carry electrical current only under short circuit or other conditions that would be potentially dangerous.
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What happens if earth and neutral wires touch?

If a neutral wire touches an earth wire, it creates a short circuit. This will cause the electricity to flow through the shortest path possible, which could result in a fire or an electric shock.
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Does neutral wire carry voltage?

The neutral wire is often said to have zero voltage on it. If you touch that wire on a live system, however, you will often find out very quickly that technically having zero voltage is very different from meaning there is no electricity present.
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