RonPecinaJr
Senior Member
- Location
- Rahway, NJ
Why would my power company (PSEG) require the 'C' phase be used for the high-leg of a 4-wire 120/ 240 delta system (meters, main disconnects), but the NEC requires the high leg be wired to the 'B' phase?
I don't think the NEC requires B phase to be the high leg. It only says that the high leg needs to be identified and marked accordingly.
It requires the center buss (B) to be the high leg.
The POCO's 3-phase metering equipment requires the C phase be the high leg.
A meter is not required in the NEC. Since the POCO wants the high leg on C phase, go with it, and roll them to put high leg on B phase in your gear. Their meters have a standard for high leg to have it on C phase.
Since the POCO wants the high leg on C phase, go with it, and roll them to put high leg on B phase in your gear.
That's what we do here, too. In metering and older existing equipment, the high leg is on the right-most terminal and in new equipment, we put the high leg in the center.
Sounds like a violation to me.
Your landing C phase in B position.
There isnt a meter or panelboard you can land your "phase" on. You can put a LEG on it. You land A leg, B leg, C leg. A phase is between two legs. A Phase: A-B legs B Phase: B-C legs C Phase: C-A legs
POCO here requires high leg on C phase also. I was told they want it the furthest away from the Neu. (in the meterbase). We also then roll it to the B phase in the panel
Sounds like a violation to me.
Your landing C phase in B position.
Why is that a violation ?
From what I am told the meter does not work with the high leg in their setup so they move it to the "C" terminal in the meter and when it comes into the building it needs to go to "B" center terminal based on the NEC.....
If your taking phase C from the power company and landing it on phase B in your panel it sounds like a problem with 408.3(E).
Did you read the exception ?
If your taking phase C from the power company and landing it on phase B in your panel it sounds like a problem with 408.3(E).
