Ok I have another electrical question that I'm hoping you guys can help me out with. I've been reading and reading and reading about isolated ground systems, star ground systems, etc. and I feel like i have this 98% correct, but that last 2% is just killing me... and all the threads I've read don't have the exact situation I'm dealing with. Most of the electricians that I have contacted aren't well versed in audio for studios, so while I've gotten a lot of great advice for general electrical, I'm not getting the info I need for a star ground system.
I understand everyone here is from different countries with different rules and codes, but any advice is appreciated.
A few important notes.
I have a 200amp main service panel at the house. I am running a 60amp breaker off the main panel to a sub-panel in the garage (being run with #6 gauge wires), which is a detached garage. The ground and neutral are bonded together in the main service panel, but will NOT be bonded together in the sub-panel, because that's code.
There are 2 ground rods at the main house (one bonded directly to the ground bus in the main service panel, and one bonded to the water pipes at another point in the house). There is a ground rod for the garage that will be bonded to the ground bus in the sub panel, as it is code for every separate building to have it's own ground rod.
Right now there are 4 conductors running from the main service panel to the sub panel in the garage. 2 hot, 1 neutral, 1 ground. They are running underground in conduit.
I built this space to not have any holes in the walls. All outlet boxes, switch boxes, sub-panel, conduit, etc. will be surface mounted to the drywall.
My plan was to run EMT conduit from the sub-panel to each metal outlet box, and use isolated ground receptacles. The metal conduit and boxes would serve as the safety ground (as they are bonded to the boxes and sub-panel), and a THHN ground wire would be run in the conduit with the hot and neutral wires to connect directly to the ground pin on the receptacles. None of the receptacles will be daisy-chained. They will all have home-runs back to the sub-panel for the hot, neutral, and isolated ground wire.
From what I understand, is for a star-ground to work, all of the isolated ground wires need to come back to a single common star point, i.e. a ground bus bar that is not bonded to the ground bus bar in the sub-panel, or the sub-panel itself. I was planning on installing a box directly under the sub-panel that is fed by PVC conduit (so it is not bonded to the metal sub-panel), and all of the isolated ground conductors would connect to a ground bus bar in this box.
Here's where I'm unsure. I think I screwed up in that I should have run 5 conductors from the main service panel to the sub-panel (2 hot, 1 neutral, 2 grounds). One ground would go from the ground/neutral bus in the main service panel to the ground bus bar in the sub-panel, and the other ground wire would go from the ground/neutral bus in the main service panel to the box that contains a ground bus bar that is not bonded to the sub-panel. This would have all the isolated ground wires coming to a commons star point, and then being brought all the way back to the main service panel where it would be bonded to the ground bus bar, and then to the ground rod at the panel.
But I only ran 4 conductors (due to a confusion/miscommunication with an electrician who I thought understood what was happening). So now, I don't know what exactly to do with the isolated ground conductors coming from each receptacle.
1 - Do I have them all join at a common star point in a separate box that is not bonded, and then splice into the 1 ground conductor coming from the main panel? Would that not defeat the purpose as now the isolated grounds are connected to the same wire that is bonded to the sub-panel ground bus?
2 - Do I just hook up the incoming ground conductor to the ground bus in the sub-panel and forget about the star-grounding thing all together? Do I use plastic boxes, PVC conduit, or other means to just run the electricity without isolating the grounds?
3 - Can I connect the ground wire that is bonded to the ground rod to the isolated ground bus bar, and leave the green ground conductor that is coming from the main service panel bonded to the ground bus in the sub-panel? Or does that ground wire that is bonded to the ground rod HAVE to be bonded to the sub-panel?
4 - Some other option I'm not aware of?
Here is a picture of the inside of the sub-panel in the garage. In the lower left is the ground wire that is bonded to the ground rod just outside the garage. To the lower right are the 4 conductors (2 hot, 1 neutral, 1 ground) being brought in from the main service panel.