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#82058 10/15/02 10:44 PM
Joined: Feb 2001
Posts: 308
S
Steve T Offline OP
Member
A contractor wants to install 3/0's through a meter mounted on the detached garage, from the load side of the meter feed a two switch disconnect immediately inside the garage, one 100amp fused switch will feed a panel in the garage with number 3's, and the other 200 amp fused switch will feed a panel in the house with 3/0's. The panel in the house has a main. The 2 switch disco is rated as service equip. The cold water ground connection from the house will be brought out to the garage and terminated in the 2 switch disco. Gnd rod will be installed and terminated in the meter.

Assuming load considerations are ok for the wire size being used, is there anything else that would make this not compliant?

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#82059 10/15/02 11:34 PM
Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 558
C
Member
If there are not any water pipes in the detached garage you do not need bond the service switch to the water pipes. The water pipes and other interior piping in the house should be bonded to the panel installed in the house. Also you need to provide a grounding electrode at the house in addition to the electrode's installed at the detached garage. If there are any metallic paths between the garage and the house the neutral in the house panel must be insulated and a separate equipment ground wire installed with the feeder to the house panel. The grounding electrodes and interior piping at the house get connected to the equipment ground not the insulated neutral.

Curt


Curt Swartz
#82060 10/16/02 11:50 AM
Joined: Feb 2001
Posts: 308
S
Steve T Offline OP
Member
Is it non-compliant to run the cold water ground from the house to the 2-switch disco. at the garage?

The panel in the house will not bond the neutral to the enclosure. It will be fed underground in PVC, so an equipment ground will be run and attached to the panel enclosure. The other end will land on the neutral buss in the 2 switch disco.

#82061 10/16/02 03:08 PM
Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 558
C
Member
Steve - Look at 250.104(3) The way I read it is that you need to bond the house water piping to the equipment ground of panel you have installed in the house. By doing this you are connecting the piping to the service switch via the equipment ground conductor installed with the feeder. There is no reason to install a separate raceway and grounding electrode conductor from the service switch to the house.


Curt Swartz
#82062 10/16/02 04:24 PM
Joined: Mar 2001
Posts: 345
T
Member
Steve
I believe both buildings must have a fully compliant grounding electrode system. Are these building existing or yet to be built? A concrete encased electrode at the garage would be the way to go in new construction. If the buildings are existing then there will need to be a minimum of two rods at each building if they don't have a concrete encased electrode. If the house has an underground metal water pipe then the two rods are sufficient as supplemental electrodes. If the garage has no electrodes other than the driven rods see if you can talk the contractor into a ground ring. Since the ground ring takes extra work and is not in fact code required you might suggest bonding the two sets of rods together via number two bare copper in the bottom of the feeder trench. I have often spaced the four rods that are required for two buildings equally along the feeder trench and connected them to both grounded busses in the two buildings using bare number two copper. Since twenty feet of number two copper encircling a small building such as a guard shack or pump house is code excepted as a stand alone electrode I figure that running the number two in the bottom of the feeder trench cannot hurt. One way I have saved a few dollars is to use bare number two run with the individual single conductor UF feeder cables in the trench between the two buildings as both the feeder equipment grounding conductor and the Grounding Electrode Conductor to the two sets of ground rods that I normally space out evenly along the bottom of the trench. The only place this would be a code violation is were the soil is corrosive to bare copper or there are livestock present on the ground above. If raceway is used for the feeder conductors then the bare wire in the trench can only serve as the grounding electrode conductor for the two buildings because the code requires that the Equipment Grounding Conductor be in the same raceway or multi conductor cable as the remaining conductors of the feeder. The deeper the feeder trench is the better. Remember that the code requires that the grounding electrodes be below permanent moisture level were practical. This is why I drive my rods through the bottom of the feeder trench thus adding the depth of the trench to the total depth of the driven rods. I have also driven rods through the bottom of the water line trench because in many portions of the country it's deeper than trenches for wire in order to protect the pipe from freezing.

One thing about the size of the feeder to the house. Since the feeder will be the "the main power feeder to a dwelling unit" you could reduce the feeder size to 2/0 copper under section 310.15 (6) assuming that the conductors are copper. If the 100 ampere panel at the garage is really warranted and the houses calculation would lead to a two hundred ampere service then the 3/0 service entry conductors may be undersized as they are only good for 225 amperes in a dwelling service.

The service conductors to the house could be run directly from the meter without a disconnect in the garage under section 230.40 exception No. 3. If they do that there should be no connection between the two buildings grounding electrode systems as it would be a parallel path for the neutral current under normal operating conditions.
--
Tom

230.40 Number of Service-Entrance Conductor Sets.
Each service drop or lateral shall supply only one set of service-entrance conductors.
Exception No. 1: A building with one or more than one occupancy shall be permitted to have one set of service-entrance conductors for each service of different characteristics, as defined in 230.2(D), run to each occupancy or group of occupancies.
Exception No. 2: Where two to six service disconnecting means in separate enclosures are grouped at one location and supply separate loads from one service drop or lateral, one set of service-entrance conductors shall be permitted to supply each or several such service equipment enclosures.
Exception No. 3: A dwelling unit and a separate structure shall be permitted to have one set of service-entrance conductors run to each from a single service drop or lateral.


Tom Horne

"This alternating current stuff is just a fad. It is much too dangerous for general use" Thomas Alva Edison
#82063 10/21/02 12:28 PM
Joined: Feb 2001
Posts: 308
S
Steve T Offline OP
Member
Thanks everyone


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