meternerd
Senior Member
- Location
- Athol, ID
- Occupation
- retired water & electric utility electrician, meter/relay tech
POCO comments
POCO comments
As a utility guy, I only know what we require. First, we do not supply the service panel. We only supply the meter. We do, however, have requirements for the service. We require a disconnect after the meter and adjacent to the meter. No disconnects are allowed ahead of the meter, because that then becomes an unmetered, unprotected section, which requires seals, etc. It's called "old sequence". New sequence is meter, disconnect, load. In the old days, the meter was on the outside of the house, but there was no access to the disconnect inside. Pulling a meter under load can be a recipie for disaster, so the new rules are a disconnect accessible to the power company. Code requires the bond to be in the "main disconnect enclosure" so it would have to be at the pole. Any further bonding of neutral and ground is prohibited. Parallel paths, yada yada yada!
I know a lot of customers prefer the meter out at the "street", but they are made aware of the fact that anything past the meter is the customer's responsibility. If there is a fault in the underground service from the meter, it can get pretty expensive if they are footing the bill instead of the POCO. Just food for thought.
POCO comments
As a utility guy, I only know what we require. First, we do not supply the service panel. We only supply the meter. We do, however, have requirements for the service. We require a disconnect after the meter and adjacent to the meter. No disconnects are allowed ahead of the meter, because that then becomes an unmetered, unprotected section, which requires seals, etc. It's called "old sequence". New sequence is meter, disconnect, load. In the old days, the meter was on the outside of the house, but there was no access to the disconnect inside. Pulling a meter under load can be a recipie for disaster, so the new rules are a disconnect accessible to the power company. Code requires the bond to be in the "main disconnect enclosure" so it would have to be at the pole. Any further bonding of neutral and ground is prohibited. Parallel paths, yada yada yada!
I know a lot of customers prefer the meter out at the "street", but they are made aware of the fact that anything past the meter is the customer's responsibility. If there is a fault in the underground service from the meter, it can get pretty expensive if they are footing the bill instead of the POCO. Just food for thought.