isaacgamez
Member
- Location
- Palm Desert Ca USA
I have a client who has existing conduit (Emt) from his home to his detached roof. Where can i find this compliant with the code book?
thank you kindly!
thank you kindly!
I have a client who has existing conduit (Emt) from his home to his detached roof. Where can i find this compliant with the code book?
thank you kindly!
And this is overhead, not buried, right? If so, what is the free span between them? Is that EMT over a walkway or driveway? If so, you'll have minimjum height restrictions.
Please tell where these height restrictions are located in the NEC.And this is overhead, not buried, right? If so, what is the free span between them? Is that EMT over a walkway or driveway? If so, you'll have minimjum height restrictions.
225.16 says the point of attachment shall comply with 230.26 which references 230.24 and 230.9 (basically refers to the normal Service drop clearance requirements). I don't see this as limited to cables or open conductors only.
225.19(D)(2) seem to apply to everything too, not just cables. It references 225.18 for clearances required which is the same as typical Service drop clearance requirements.
Because its the point of attachment to the building, not to a disconnect or box. If that attachment point needs to be 10' up in the air, there is no reason you can't come down after that to come into a disconnect.
I think what this is saying (whether it is the intent or not), is if you do an overhead drop to a building and you have cables or a raceway overhead, it needs to be high enough that it won't get struck.
Each of the final referenced rules does indicate open conductors or cables. But what sends you there is the first place does not. Not sure how to interpret in that case. Would you think it is OK to run an exposed raceway 5' above grade across where people could walk?
I have a client who has existing conduit (Emt) from his home to his detached roof. Where can i find this compliant with the code book?
thank you kindly!
Because its the point of attachment to the building, not to a disconnect or box. If that attachment point needs to be 10' up in the air, there is no reason you can't come down after that to come into a disconnect.
I think what this is saying (whether it is the intent or not), is if you do an overhead drop to a building and you have cables or a raceway overhead, it needs to be high enough that it won't get struck.
Each of the final referenced rules does indicate open conductors or cables. But what sends you there is the first place does not. Not sure how to interpret in that case. Would you think it is OK to run an exposed raceway 5' above grade across where people could walk?
So what does overhead mean? It isn't direct buried, and you could argue that something at shoulder level isn't overhead. A raceway at 7' over the ground isn't overhead conductors?
I see no definition of overhead conductors in the NEC except on Services.
225.19 is not restricted to overhead conductors. Subparts (D) and (2) say "final span" and do not say "overhead". This refers you to 225.18 for height restrictions. You'd have to do 225.18 anyway if you were running overhead open cables/conductors. Why refer you back 20 225.18 if it didn't apply in some different way?
I agree.So what does overhead mean? It isn't direct buried, and you could argue that something at shoulder level isn't overhead.
No it is an overhead "raceway" the conductors are inside. The sections in question are referring to "open conductors", and not conductors contained in a raceway or cable. wouldn't all conductors in raceways run on ceilings be overhead conductors otherwise, then we wouldn't be allowed to run raceways on ceilings (or at least not be able to pull conductors through them) if the ceiling were not high enough for clearance requirements.A raceway at 7' over the ground isn't overhead conductors?
I don't even see a definition there.I see no definition of overhead conductors in the NEC except on Services.
225.19 is not restricted to overhead conductors. Subparts (D) and (2) say "final span" and do not say "overhead". This refers you to 225.18 for height restrictions. You'd have to do 225.18 anyway if you were running overhead open cables/conductors. Why refer you back 20 225.18 if it didn't apply in some different way?
No it is an overhead "raceway" the conductors are inside. The sections in question are referring to "open conductors", and not conductors contained in a raceway or cable. wouldn't all conductors in raceways run on ceilings be overhead conductors otherwise, then we wouldn't be allowed to run raceways on ceilings (or at least not be able to pull conductors through them) if the ceiling were not high enough for clearance requirements.
That is correct, but the clearances in discussion only apply to open conductors, not conductors inside of a raceway. The OP does not have any exposed conductors between the buildings, just a raceway that spans between two buildings that are apparently close enough to one another there is no raceway support issues.No. Article 225 deals with circuits TO a detached structure. These rules are only appling at the connection TO the structure, not once you're distributing circuits around inside it. So run at whatever height you want once you're past the structure disconnect.
