🗓️ MAY 22, 2026
⚡ GROUNDING & BONDING — EP 14
Missing Links in Separately Derived Systems ⚠️
joshthesparky4 · Josh The Sparky
You think you’ve mastered the Grounding Electrode System (GES) from yesterday?
Now, imagine you’re installing a dry-type transformer or a generator where the neutral is switched.
If you treat that new source like it’s just another branch circuit, you’ve already failed the inspection—and compromised the safety of the install.
⚡ A Separately Derived System (SDS) is its own “Island of Power.”
Per NEC 250.2, an SDS has no direct electrical connection to the conductors of the original supply. It creates its own source. Because it’s a new source, it needs its own grounding infrastructure.
This is where the System Bonding Jumper (SBJ) and the Grounding Electrode Conductor (GEC) come into play. You aren’t just extending the building’s ground—you are establishing a new reference point.
1. Identify the Source
Transformers, generators (switched neutral), and solar inverters are the usual suspects.
2. Establish the Bond
You must install a System Bonding Jumper between the neutral and the equipment grounding conductor—usually at the first disconnect or the transformer itself (NEC 250.30(A)(1)).
3. Connect to the GES
You must tie this new system into the existing building Grounding Electrode System. You don’t just drive a new rod and call it a day—you bond it back to the “web” we talked about in Episode 12.
“It’s just a transformer; I’ll just pull a green wire from the primary panel.”
Wrong.
If you don’t establish that local bond at the SDS, your overcurrent protection may not trip during a ground fault. You’ll have “floating” voltages that can damage sensitive electronics or, worse, energize the metal casing of your equipment.
Clears Faults Fast
The SBJ provides the low-impedance path back to the source so the breaker actually trips.
Voltage Stability
It keeps the “island” referenced properly, preventing abnormal voltage behavior.
Code Compliance
NEC 250.30 is one of the most heavily inspected sections during rough-in.
⚡ If there’s no direct conductor connection, it’s a New Source.
⚡ New Source = New Bonding Point.
⚡ The System Bonding Jumper is the most important connection in the system.
Don’t let your “Island of Power” become a “Floating Nightmare.”
Bond it right—or don’t energize it.
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