Highbeam said:Those are all 110 loads so what happened is that your AC circuit was broken intermittently since it had a good hot wire. The push pull of AC wasn't able to push and pull too well so the voltage potential varied up to 110. Shouldn't have seen any higher voltage than 110 on those circtuits. Now your 220 circuits don't even use the neutral so they should have been fine.
I have always been told that a subpanel at an outbuilding gets its own grounding system including ground rods. It will look just like a service entrance from the street where you only need three wires from the house. Hot, hot, and neutral. The ground will go to the rods.
it will see higher and lower voltages. got to see it first hand. when i got to this guys house he had 60 volts on one phase and 180 on the other. it would change with the different loads put on each phase. when i shut off his main everything was normal as far as measuring the voltage from phase to phase and from phase to ground. turn on his breaker and the voltage varied. thought it was a bad main breaker so i changed it. still the same. power company came and fixed the center tap on their wire at the pole and everything was normal. he still needs a new ground but won't here of it. so we wait for the next time it happens to him so that he can buy all new electronic.
if you want to add a ground rod there go ahead. the #4 should be hooked to an auxillary ground bar inside your subpanel(you will have to purchase this separate), and do not bond the nuetral. all nuetrals from branch ckts go to nuetral bar, all bares or greens go to aux grnd bar. being in your shed does not make it any different that being a sub panel anywhere else in your home. it is not a separately derived system as it is not a standalone service nor is it derived from a XFMR. If you need code sections i will be more than happy to look them up. I'm just being lazy right now. 15 yr IBEW inside wireman.