This article was posted 11/12/2008 and is most likely outdated.

Electrical Services, Part 1
 

 

Topic - NEC
Subject - Electrical Services, Part 1

November 12, 2008
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Electrical Services, Part 1

 

By Mike Holt – a short summary of the requirements contained in the Understanding the 2008 NEC, Volume 1 Textbook.

 

Understand the requirements for the conductors supplying your service.

 

Article 230 divides neatly into three general “blocks” of coverage. The first block includes general requirements, overhead service drop conductors, and underground lateral conductors. These are covered by Article 230 Parts I, II, and III respectively.

 

The second and third blocks of Article 230 provide requirements for service-entrance conductors and service equipment. We will address those in Part 2 of this article.

 

Number of Services

 

Service drop conductors and underground lateral conductors are the conductors coming from the service point to the service entrance conductors or, sometimes, directly to the service equipment itself [See Article 100 definitions starting with Service and ending with Service Point.

 

Utility owned conductors before the service point are outside of the scope of the NEC [90.2(B)(5)], and therefore have no definitions or requirements.

 

A building or structure can be served by only one service drop or service lateral [230.2]. The exceptions are:

 

For special conditions:

 

  • Fire pumps.
  • Emergency systems.
  • Legally required standby systems.
  • Optional standby systems.
  • Parallel power production systems.
  • Systems designed for connection to multiple sources of supply for the purpose of enhanced reliability.
  • For special occupancies, and with written consent from the Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ) [Article 100 Special Permission]:
  • Multiple-occupancy buildings where there’s no available space for supply equipment accessible to all occupants.

For capacity requirements:

  • A building or other structure so large that two or more supplies are necessary.
  • Where the capacity requirements exceed 2,000A, or where the load requirements of a single-phase installation exceeds the utility’s capacity.
  • By written consent of the (AHJ) [Article 100 Special Permission].

You can also have additional services for different voltages, frequencies, or phases; or for different uses, such as for different electricity rate schedules.

 

Where a structure is supplied by more than one service, or a combination of feeders and services, you must install a permanent plaque or directory at each service or building disconnect location to denote all other services and feeders supplying that structure, and the area served by each.

 

If you want a separate service for emergency or legally required systems [700.12(D) and 701.11(D)], you must get AHJ approval for it.

 

If you are using a separate service for a fire pump, emergency system, or standby power system, the disconnect must be located remotely away from the normal power disconnect [230.72(B)]. The reason for this requirement is to minimize the possibility of accidental interruption.

 

Keep them separate

 

Service conductors must not pass through the interior of another structure [230.3]. Nor can you install them in the same raceway or cable with feeder or branch-circuit conductors [230.7]. This rule doesn’t prohibit the mixing of service, feeder, and branch-circuit conductors in the same service equipment enclosure.

 

Clearances

 

Overhead service conductors installed in a cable, or as individual open conductors, must be at least 3 ft from doors, porches, balconies, ladders, stairs, fire escapes, or similar locations [230.9(A)]. They must also be at least 3 ft from windows that open. If they run above a window, you don’t have to maintain the 3 ft distance to that window.

 

Maintain a vertical clearance of at least 10 ft above platforms, projections, or surfaces from which people might reach an overhead conductor [230.9(B) and 230.24(B)]. This vertical clearance must be maintained for 3 ft, measured horizontally from the platform, projections, or surfaces from which people might reach them.

 

Don’t install service conductors under an opening through which materials might pass, nor where they will obstruct entrance to building openings [230.9(C)]. Finally, don’t use vegetation as support [230.10].

 

Service drop conductor sizing

 

Service-drop conductors must have adequate mechanical strength, and they must have sufficient ampacity to carry the load as calculated in Article 220 [230.23].

 

Ungrounded service-drop conductors can’t be smaller than 8 AWG copper or 6 AWG aluminum, except in limited-load installations, where they can be as small as 12 AWG [230.23(B)].

 

Size the neutral service-drop conductor to carry the maximum unbalanced load, per 220.61, but don’t size it smaller than required by 250.24(C). It can’t be smaller than that, because it must have sufficiently low impedance and current-carrying capacity to safely carry fault current and thus facilitate operation of an overcurrent device.

 

See if you can correctly answer this question: What size neutral conductor in a service drop do you need for a structure with a 400A service supplied with 500 kcmil conductors if the maximum line-to-neutral load is no more than 100A?

 

(a) 3 AWG         (b) 2 AWG         (c) 1 AWG         (d) 1/0 AWG

 

Answer: (d) 1/0 AWG

 

According to Table 310.16, 3 AWG rated 100A at 75°C [110.14(C)] is sufficient to carry 100A of neutral current. But the service neutral conductor can’t be sized smaller than 1/0 AWG (per Table 250.66, based on the area of the ungrounded service conductors) [250.24(C)].

 

Service-drop conductor vertical clearances

 

Service-drop conductor spans must maintain a minimum of 8 ft above a roof surface, for a minimum distance of 3 ft in all directions from the edge of the roof [230.24(A)]. There are exceptions, however. For example, if the slope of the roof exceeds 4 in. of vertical rise for every 12 in. of horizontal run, you can reduce the clearances of 120/208V or 120/240V conductors to 3 ft over the roof.

 

Overhead conductor spans must maintain the following vertical clearances:

  • 10 ft above finished grade, sidewalks, or platforms or projections from which they might be accessible to pedestrians for 120/208V or 120/240V circuits.
  • 12 ft above residential property and driveways, and those commercial areas not subject to truck traffic for 120/208V, 120/240V, or 277/480V circuits.
  • 18 ft over public streets, alleys, roads, parking areas subject to truck traffic, driveways on other than residential property, and other areas traversed by vehicles, such as those used for cultivation, grazing, forestry, and orchards.

If overhead service conductors are not under the exclusive control of the electric utility [90.2(B)(5)] but are located above pools, outdoor spas, outdoor hot tubs, diving structures, observation stands, towers, or platforms, install them per the clearance requirements of 680.8.

 

Attachment

 

The point of attachment for service-drop conductors must be at least 10 ft above the finished grade. Choose a location that allows you to maintain the minimum service conductor clearance required by 230.9 and 230.24 [230.26]. This means you don’t just attach it at 10 feet and one inch and call it good. You might need to raise the point of attachment so you still comply with 230.9 and 230.24.

 

When attaching multiconductor service cables, use only fittings identified for use with service conductors [230.27]. Attach open service conductors to fittings identified for use with service conductors or to noncombustible, nonabsorbent insulators securely attached to the building or other structure.

 

Support

 

The service mast used as overhead conductor support must have adequate mechanical strength (or braces or guy wires to support it) to withstand the strain caused by the service-drop conductors [230.28]. Some local codes require a minimum 2 in. rigid metal conduit for the service mast. In addition, many electric utilities contain specific requirements for the installation of the service mast.

 

The only conductors you can attach to a service mast are the electric utility service-drop conductors. Don’t attach cabling from other systems to it. 810.12 and 820.44(C) also specify that aerial cables for radio, TV, or CATV must not be attached to the service mast, and 810.12 prohibits antennas from being attached to the service mast. In addition, 800.133(B) and 830.133(B) prohibit broadband communications cables from being attached to raceways, including a service mast.

 

Underground service-lateral conductors

 

Underground service-lateral conductors under the exclusive control of an electric utility must comply with the National Electrical Safety Code (NESC), not the National Electrical Code [90.2(B)(5)]. Underground conductors that are not under the exclusive control of the electric utility must be installed in accordance with the NEC.

 

Service-lateral conductors must have adequate mechanical strength, and they must have sufficient ampacity to carry the load as calculated in Article 220 [230.31(A)]. Service-lateral conductors must not be smaller than 8 AWG copper or 6 AWG aluminum [230.31(B)]. Exception: Service-lateral conductors can be as small as 12 AWG for limited-load installations.

 

Size the neutral service-lateral conductor to carry the maximum unbalanced load per 220.61. Don’t size the service neutral conductor smaller than required by 250.24(C) and Table 250.66 [230.31(C)]. If you install service lateral conductors underground, make sure they have the minimum cover required by Table 300.5.

 

Now that we’ve reviewed the requirements for sizing and installing conductors that are coming from the service point, you’ve probably noticed that Article 230 presents these requirements in a logical sequence. You should be able to set your one-line diagram down right next to it and proceed straight through the requirements. In Part 2 of this article, you’ll be able to make a similar observation.

 

To purchase Mike Holt’s Understanding the 2008 NEC, Volume 1 textbook, please click here, or call our office at 888-632-2633 for more information.

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Comments
  • Cleveland Publ;ic Power does electrical services for FREE including the main breaker panel or service switch. They do not use licensed electricians and do not get inspections and building permits from the building department. These havr all kinds of violations:

    1. Residential wire sizes in commercial 100 Amp and 200 Amp services.

    2. Weatherhead below the attachment insulator with the splices above the weatherhead. This can cause conductors to act as a water hose particularly when an insulated neutral in the conduit is connected to bare ACSR in the service drop. This was outlawed 30 years ago. Not surprising considering that some places around Cleve=land required knob-and-tube wiring up to 1973. Some inspectors outside city of Cleveland allowing insulators and splices above the weatherhead.

    3. Inadequate 1/2 inch copper clad steel communications ground rods instead of 5/6 power grounding rods.

    4. Attachment insulator screwed into vinyl siding and aspenite instead of through bolted to building structure. Insulator pulls loose during the first winter or wind storm.

    5. Service conductors for one occupancy inside another occupancy instead of outside the building.

    6. Broken rigid conduit to flexible conduit coupling that is broken and with the flex too short anyways.

    7. Flexible conduit poking through a floor which is a smoke and fire spread problem.

    8. No grounding jumper around flexible conduit.

    9. Three wire 3-phase service connected to 4-wire 277Y480 or 120/240 delta. This is both a grounding ( tingle voltage ) hazard and an electric shock hazard. When sa form 12s meter is pulled one of the hot wires is still energized.

    10. 277Y480 1,000 Amps ands greater frequently does not have ground fault protection for equipment. I have also seen 277Y480 services with no neutral and the ground fault path is through another lighting service with #2 ACSR primary neutral as part of the fault path for 1200 amp or 1600 amp service fuses. What do you thing is going to blow first, the 1600 amp fuses or the #2 ACSR?

    NEC 90.2(B)(5) is just simply abused. That part of NEC was intended only for use with urban networks where conductors go a short distance from an outside vault to an interior pull box, meter switch, or cold sequence service switch.

    A bigger problem in Ohio is that municipal utilities are a law unto themselves. There is no public utilites commission oversight of safety, construction standards, or rates. There is no 3rd party oversight of safety and safety is a matter of whether the utility volunteers for it.

    In the Case of Cleveland Public Power what you get fror FREE is not a whole lot more than nothing.

    Actually, Ohio EDison tries not to take any responsibility for suburban underground conductors beyond a nut and bolt connection at the padmount busbars. They also got to be infamous back in 1995 for making an electrical contractor climb their pole and hang a 13,200Y23,000 volt drop for them. We have to do their work sometimes because they would otherwise have to hire an expensive out of town crew and then make the customer pay through the nose.

    Michael R. Cole
    Reply to this comment

  • I'm not lazy - just busy. With regard to the 3' minimum clearance over a roof for the service conductors (4 inch rise per 12 inch run), is there not another exception or something that allows even less clerarance?

    In particluar, I seem to remember something like: If the service mast penetrates the roof (through an eave, sloped roof, and less than (3 feet from the edge of the roof?), the clearance can be reduced even further (18 inches?).

    In many residential situtations witht the service equipment on the side of the house near the front of the house, a 3'6" or 4' stem (point of attachment to the mast at 3' or higher for droop) looks like a flag pole.

    TC
    Reply to this comment

  • I see service drops regularly (some even with deteriorated insulation and bare conductors) that are readily accessible from porches and decks. I call these out as a safety issue, the local utility is called, and they say "all if OK". I know the utilities don't have to comply with NEC, but where is the line?

    I'm going to, instead, call these out and recommend a licensed electrician be consulted. Hopefully, the electricians will understand the safety issue at hand and be a little more forceful in corrective action. The utilities seem to blow people off about such issues.

    Matthew Steger
    Reply to this comment


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