2" LB Fill Question

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c2500

Senior Member
Location
South Carolina
I know you can place 4 4/0 wires in a 2" Schedule 40 PVC Conduit. I opened the cover of an LB I had purchased and it says on an added label "maximum of 3 4/0's". It was a brand from the supply house, Royal I think. Is there a direct code reference for this as I want to be compliant? Also, is there a brand that allows 3 4/0's and a 2/0? I am running SER from a meter can/main to a sub panel. The conduit is there to protect the SER before it enters the crawl space.

Thanks,

c2500
 

augie47

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Tennessee
Occupation
State Electrical Inspector (Retired)
Your Code reference is 314.28.(A)(3)
The LB is limited to the manufacturer rating or the 6 X requirement.
In metallic LBs there are forms that will allow the (4) 4/0, but I don't know of any non-metallic.
 

nakulak

Senior Member
in my limited experience, overfilling LBs (which I have done myself) and using 25% fill xp fittings on 40% filled pipe (which I have almost done myself) are 2 extremely common wiring errors
 

hillbilly1

Senior Member
Location
North Georgia mountains
Occupation
Owner/electrical contractor
Your Code reference is 314.28.(A)(3)
The LB is limited to the manufacturer rating or the 6 X requirement.
In metallic LBs there are forms that will allow the (4) 4/0, but I don't know of any non-metallic.

I've had inspectors ignore the manufacture rating and will not go with anything less than the 6X requirement.
 

cadpoint

Senior Member
Location
Durham, NC
I don't see how the stamped cubic inch volume can be abridged.

I've also pondered the limit of a Wire Size veries the Cubic Inches involved!

I've seen the one size up used with a reducing threaded bushing... :roll:
 

c2500

Senior Member
Location
South Carolina
I passed today by using 2 1/2" PVC with the LB then reduced down to 2" for the male adapter and connector for the SER after the LB. The supply house did not have a 2 1/2" connector so the $12.00 reducer bushing was used.

They burn you when you go to 2 1/2" fittings.

Thanks for the code reference infinity. Also thanks for the other info everyone.

c2500
 
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Is the equipment ground conductor that is installed with the ungrounded conductors required to be bonded to the enclosure?
 

danickstr

Senior Member
I like the 2 1/2" bushed up LB and use it myself for that issue. The wholesale house here tried to ding me for 97 bucks and I complained. They took it down to 66 bucks. I found it at the Orange Box for about 30. Why do they do it to me?
 

don_resqcapt19

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Illinois
Occupation
retired electrician
Mogul LB's are a rip-off. Going a size up with RE's is one solution. ...
One issue with the use of an oversized LB is that if they are over 100 cubic inches they have have to be supported independent from the conduit. 314.23(E). A Red Dot 1.5" mogul LB has a volume of 128 cubic inches. The exception to the section would permit the 1.5" LB to be supported by 1.5" conduit but not by a smaller conduit.
 

Cow

Senior Member
Location
Eastern Oregon
Occupation
Electrician
Is the equipment ground conductor that is installed with the ungrounded conductors required to be bonded to the enclosure?

Since the circuit conductors are not spliced, I would say no. 250.148

Generally, we bump the LB up a size or two to help the fill requirements if we're cutting it close.
 

c2500

Senior Member
Location
South Carolina
One issue with the use of an oversized LB is that if they are over 100 cubic inches they have have to be supported independent from the conduit. 314.23(E). A Red Dot 1.5" mogul LB has a volume of 128 cubic inches. The exception to the section would permit the 1.5" LB to be supported by 1.5" conduit but not by a smaller conduit.

Don,

If you ran 2 1/2" pvc from the meterbox/main combo into a 2 1/2"LB then out of the back of the LB with 2 1/2" then bushed down to 2" so that a connecter clamp could be used would be legal? That is the way I am reading it.

c2500
 

don_resqcapt19

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Illinois
Occupation
retired electrician
Don,

If you ran 2 1/2" pvc from the meterbox/main combo into a 2 1/2"LB then out of the back of the LB with 2 1/2" then bushed down to 2" so that a connecter clamp could be used would be legal? That is the way I am reading it.

c2500
It looks like the exception would permit that. If you use the 2.5" LB with 2" conduit, then you can't use the conduit to support the LB.
 

c2500

Senior Member
Location
South Carolina
Ok fellas,

I have only been able to find 2" connectors that will allow me to clamp down on the SER. The supply house could only find 2 ", nothing larger. Therefore, I have to bush down. The inspectors here want the SER clamped as it leaves the conduit. Is there a 2 1/2" connector that I can use on the SER? I simply have to screw it into a female adapter. It does not have to be weather tight.

Thanks,

c2500
 
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