Just like the title says;
I've recently taken over as the Maintenance Manager for an industrial plant (shall remain nameless) and I've been having all kinds of fun fixing and rewiring numerous machines on the shop floor. The previous holder of this job was apparently more of a DIY electrical guru and it shows in some of the rework I've had to do.
But my main question concerns one particular press brake I have that is wired for 3ph 480V. I've traced the conduit back through the overhead and it ends up going to a 120V panel! Pulled the cover off to continue tracing it out and discover it's using the 120V panel as a pass-through junction box basically. There is a 3/4 conduit run coming out the side of the 120 going over to the adjacent 480 panel sitting 2 feet away. This guy wired the 480 and I guess used a spare conduit run he had coming from the first panel and then just made a jump across to get to the breaker he needed.
It seems lazy as hell to me but I know Article 300.3 (C) allows for multiple conductors of different voltages to share the same conduit enclosure, but is does that also apply to electrical panels as well?
My gut tells me this is wrong and needs to be changed, but my boss is going to want to see specific coding before I convince him to let me rework this.
I've recently taken over as the Maintenance Manager for an industrial plant (shall remain nameless) and I've been having all kinds of fun fixing and rewiring numerous machines on the shop floor. The previous holder of this job was apparently more of a DIY electrical guru and it shows in some of the rework I've had to do.
But my main question concerns one particular press brake I have that is wired for 3ph 480V. I've traced the conduit back through the overhead and it ends up going to a 120V panel! Pulled the cover off to continue tracing it out and discover it's using the 120V panel as a pass-through junction box basically. There is a 3/4 conduit run coming out the side of the 120 going over to the adjacent 480 panel sitting 2 feet away. This guy wired the 480 and I guess used a spare conduit run he had coming from the first panel and then just made a jump across to get to the breaker he needed.
It seems lazy as hell to me but I know Article 300.3 (C) allows for multiple conductors of different voltages to share the same conduit enclosure, but is does that also apply to electrical panels as well?
My gut tells me this is wrong and needs to be changed, but my boss is going to want to see specific coding before I convince him to let me rework this.