don_resqcapt19 said:
The rule doesn't say "directly" between. All feeders are between the service disconnect and the panel. Some just not as directly between as others.
It doesn't have to say "directly." You have to read the first sentence, before you read the second. The only feeder(s) to which the rule applies are the main power feeder(s) to each dwelling unit. What is being misinterpreted here (even by you, Mike) is the nature of the second sentence.
jwelectric said:
I also see the definition of a main power feeder
For application of this section, the main power feeder shall be the feeder(s) between the main disconnect and the lighting and appliance branch-circuit panelboards(s).
That is not a "definition." If it were, it would be either in Article 100 or at the beginning of 310. It is an explanation, a clarification. It is pointing out to us which feeder(s) are intended to be covered by the section. But you still have to start by looking for the source(s) of power to the dwelling unit(s) , and looking for the panel(s) to which that source of power is connected.
If anyone wants to play the language game called "precision ambiguity" (as in "it doesn't say
directly between"), then consider this: The first sentence says "to," and not "within."
. . . feeder conductors that serve as the main power feeder to each dwelling unit. . . .
No feeder that begins at a panel within the dwelling unit and that serves another panel in the same dwelling unit could be considered a
"feeder to" the dwelling unit. Rather, it's a
"feeder within" the dwelling unit.
It's like the old riddle to which nobody (except me 8)

) gets the correct answer. The question is "How far can a dog run into a forest?" The usual answer (the usual wrong answer) is "Half way, since beyond that point the dog is running out of, and no longer into, the forest." The correct answer, of course, is "The length of its body, since beyond that point the dog is running in, and no longer into, the forest."