The power company supplies a neutral. In the NEC, the earth is not considered a parallel path for neutral current if there is neutral to earth ground bonding at the utility xfmr and again at the service, which is typical.
For overhead triplex, it hits a porcelain anchor and an insulated neutral conductor. If underground, has to be PVC conduit. The idea stays the same, do not provide a path in parallel for neutral current except as intended and allowed.
underscore dan -
You are absolutely right. If all anyone did was residential or other installs where the utility supplied transformer was off the customer premisis, then it wouldn't matter a bit.
But, alas, we don't.
To my thinking there is no difference in the science between a utility owned transformer and a customer owned transformer. Yet some how the code makes this distinction.
Take a look at the following two cases:
1. Cusomer owned 69kv/480v grounded Y, 1000kva, service connection is on the primary side. This one gets an NG bond at the xfm, 5 wires from the xfm to the first disconnect. There is no N/G bond at the first disconnect. This is right by 250.30.A.1. Everything downstream from the first disconnect 5 wire.
2. Utility owned 69kv/480v grounded Y, 1000kva, Service connection is on the secondary. Transformer is on cutomer property, same place it would have gone if installed as Case 1 above. This one gets an NG bond at the xfm, 4 wires from the xfm to the first disconnect, another NG bond at the first disconnect. This is right by 250.24.A.2. Everything downstream from the first disconnect 5 wire.
Why are these two different? (There is a reason -I'll tell you later)
Now add that other pesky issue - parallel paths:
Make this an industiral site and put a groundmat under the facility including the transformer area. For the utility owned transformer, following 250.24.A.2, there is a code mandated parallel path for the neutral current.
under Dan - one question:
... The idea stays the same, do not provide a path in parallel for neutral current except as intended and allowed.
When is it a good design practice to have an "intended and allowed" parallel path for neutral? And I am not considering a path solely through the earth as a parallel path. That just doesn't sound like a good idea at all.
I said I'd tell you why the the utility transformer case is different than the SDS case. It's cause, "The code says what it says - moronic or not.":roll::grin:
cf