A disconnecting means at the distribution point is only required for farms that have the conditions listed in 547.1, right? Why is this disconnecting means needed for these buildings? Also, am I correct that a distribution point can be used when article 547 does not apply, even though it is defined there? I didn't see anything elsewhere that prohibits having a pole with a meter with service drops to several buildings, for something that isn't a farm per article 547. I believe this pole could have a disconnect, but not required, and if one were present would not need to be grounded. Is this correct?
So if there is a pole the utility wires connect to, and customer wires then go down the pole to the meter and back up and to the buildings. The overhead wires are service drops. Is there a name for the wires to and from the meter?
When there is a light on this pole, I wouldn't think there would be a branch circuit coming from one of the buildings back to the pole, so how does this light meet code requirements (where is the branch circuit overcurrent protection, service equipment, service disconnect, etc)?
So if there is a pole the utility wires connect to, and customer wires then go down the pole to the meter and back up and to the buildings. The overhead wires are service drops. Is there a name for the wires to and from the meter?
When there is a light on this pole, I wouldn't think there would be a branch circuit coming from one of the buildings back to the pole, so how does this light meet code requirements (where is the branch circuit overcurrent protection, service equipment, service disconnect, etc)?