If running individual it seems like a reduced neutral could be used for the application.Ok so if 2/0 is all that is needed for the EGC then the 350-350-350-4/0 quad would work at a cost of $8300. Cost is the same for individual 350x3 + 2/0x1
2/0 is all you need for the ECG if your using 350's on a 100A breaker.
Not to put too fine a point on it, but your area (44°03'25.6"N 123°06'12.2"W) seems like it's pretty far from Centerville, Pennsylvania.Yes in my area people ... can be miles from any three phase.
I assume this would be a feeder, and he wants a neuter hence the 4 wire. As I recommend earlier, I would keep it a service and skip the EGC. If it's a feeder, could maybe skip the neuter all together and use a small 240-120/240 transformer at the load end (don't know what the 120 loads are and didn't do the math on wire vs small tranny cost, just an idea).Not to put too fine a point on it, but your area (44°03'25.6"N 123°06'12.2"W) seems like it's pretty far from Centerville, Pennsylvania.
What's the application? Continuous duty or intermittent? Could it be engine driven, eliminating the powerline entirely?
If it's single phase, why is four-wire cable being considered?
Good catch yeah 2/0 for each set.Actually, I believe that if you upsize to _two_ parallel 350's, then you need a smidge larger than 4/0 for the EGC.
LOL That would be quite the commute. I am not the OP thats where he is.Not to put too fine a point on it, but your area (44°03'25.6"N 123°06'12.2"W) seems like it's pretty far from Centerville, Pennsylvania.
Thats a good question, the OP stated he is using a 20HP single phase motor, so I am assuming irrigation pump.What's the application? Continuous duty or intermittent? Could it be engine driven, eliminating the powerline entirely?