Step-by-Step Process on how to ground solar panelsStep 1: Drive a grounding rod into the ground Drive a grounding rod into the ground near your solar panel array. Step 2: Connect a grounding wire Following this, you should connect a grounding wire to the grounding rod.
Wiring solar panels together can be done with pre-installed wires at the modules, but extending the wiring to the inverter or service panel requires selecting the right wire. For rooftop PV installations, you can use the PV wire, known in Europe as TUV PV Wire or EN 50618 solar cable standard.
What bare copper wire should I use for solar panel grounding?
Throughout this guide, we've covered the key aspects of solar panel grounding, from understanding regulatory requirements to avoiding common mistakes. Remember, the most crucial takeaway is to always use #6 AWG bare copper wire for outdoor grounding. This simple yet vital detail can make the difference between passing and failing an inspection.
How do I connect a ground wire to a PV array?
In the junction box, the ground wire is connected to a ground lug as shown in the next section. The other end of the ground wire continues on and connects to a ground lug on each PV mount rail, and then terminates at a new ground rod I installed at the east end of the array.
How do you connect a photovoltaic array to a house?
Connect or “bond” all ground rods together via bare copper wire (#6 or larger, see the NEC) and bury the wire. Use only approved clamps to connect wire to rods. If your photovoltaic array is some distance from the house, drive ground rod (s) near it, and bury bare wire in the trench with the power lines.
A grounding wire of 6 AWG must be connected to the grounding terminal on the inverter and connected to a single-point grounding connection wire. If there is no suitable grounding connection point, then the grounding wire from the inverter must be connected to the negative terminal of the battery bank for off-grid systems.
How do you ground a battery?
To ground a battery in a solar panel system, combine the green wire safety ground and the DC battery bus ground (i.e., negative grounding the battery bus--typically) in one place (at the local ground rod, again typically). This ensures that any short circuits to "metal" (racks, electrical panel metal boxes, kitchen sink, cold/hot water plumbing, gas appliances) are safely grounded.