This question involves a residential setting, a standby generator application.
If you were to try and feed two residences from one generator ( which I do
not recommend or do ) I see a few issues. First I do generators fairly
regularly. I know how to configure multiple transfer switches with one
source, with one transfer switch sensing and the rest utilizing only the
transfer circuit.
The gen is a 50 kW, floating neutral, solidly grounded/bonded at each
service . The thinking is 25kW to each residence. Both will have a standard
transfer switch feeding a small sub panel at each location. Underground
PVC run to both locations. Don?t figure voltage drop.
1. What does the local utility think about it. You are crossing property lines.
2. Are the two residences on the same utility feed. ( One guy looses power
and the other doesn?t )
3. Now the main question. Splitting the feed would require the breaker on
the gen to allow double landed conductors. After that problem is solved,
445.13 ex. would allow someone to size the conductors at 100% of
generator rated output ( not gen breaker size ). In all the great minds out
there would that mean that each run of conduit requires full sized
conductors?
Each conduit run is also capable of full fault current. So if you had a 100
amp breaker at each house panel and sized the wire accordingly and the
incoming feed went to ground before the 100 amp breaker, the grounded
conductor returning to source is undersized.
If the generator went to ground /frame the equipment ground is sized for
100 amp. Current would travel to each service bond and back to source at
generator on undersized conductors. In parallel but I don?t think that?s code.
If current traveled through utility grounded conductor, that isn?t source, but
would it trip the gen?s breaker. ( I have Mike Holts grounding vs bonding
book )
Distance has got to be too far for tap rule. ? ( 200? each )
I believe the installers intent is to size the wire to the 100 amp breakers at
each house ( plus voltage drop ).
A sign at each service is a MUST!
I would probably come out next to the generator to a 200amp RT panel and
break it up there.
I wouldn?t be asking if someone hadn?t already invested thousands $$ into
this and it is part way finished.
If you were to try and feed two residences from one generator ( which I do
not recommend or do ) I see a few issues. First I do generators fairly
regularly. I know how to configure multiple transfer switches with one
source, with one transfer switch sensing and the rest utilizing only the
transfer circuit.
The gen is a 50 kW, floating neutral, solidly grounded/bonded at each
service . The thinking is 25kW to each residence. Both will have a standard
transfer switch feeding a small sub panel at each location. Underground
PVC run to both locations. Don?t figure voltage drop.
1. What does the local utility think about it. You are crossing property lines.
2. Are the two residences on the same utility feed. ( One guy looses power
and the other doesn?t )
3. Now the main question. Splitting the feed would require the breaker on
the gen to allow double landed conductors. After that problem is solved,
445.13 ex. would allow someone to size the conductors at 100% of
generator rated output ( not gen breaker size ). In all the great minds out
there would that mean that each run of conduit requires full sized
conductors?
Each conduit run is also capable of full fault current. So if you had a 100
amp breaker at each house panel and sized the wire accordingly and the
incoming feed went to ground before the 100 amp breaker, the grounded
conductor returning to source is undersized.
If the generator went to ground /frame the equipment ground is sized for
100 amp. Current would travel to each service bond and back to source at
generator on undersized conductors. In parallel but I don?t think that?s code.
If current traveled through utility grounded conductor, that isn?t source, but
would it trip the gen?s breaker. ( I have Mike Holts grounding vs bonding
book )
Distance has got to be too far for tap rule. ? ( 200? each )
I believe the installers intent is to size the wire to the 100 amp breakers at
each house ( plus voltage drop ).
A sign at each service is a MUST!
I would probably come out next to the generator to a 200amp RT panel and
break it up there.
I wouldn?t be asking if someone hadn?t already invested thousands $$ into
this and it is part way finished.