wireday
Senior Member
- Location
- New England
- Occupation
- Master electrician
Or does it fall under 800.100(B)(2)(6)
Yes.I guess Im still a little confused, If the 2/O that is connected to the incoming water pipe within the first five feet, is there. And it runs to my main distribution panel.Can I bond 10 or 15 feet away from the water pipe connection.I just was planning on using a Burndy split bolt to the bonding wire coming from the CATV Box.I was looking at 830.100(B)(2)
I guess Im still a little confused, If the 2/O that is connected to the incoming water pipe within the first five feet, is there. And it runs to my main distribution panel.Can I bond 10 or 15 feet away from the water pipe connection.I just was planning on using a Burndy split bolt to the bonding wire coming from the CATV Box.I was looking at 830.100(B)(2)
By way of a grounding block? Not just normal, required. As to the #12 size, the NEC is not specific as noted previously.Today I noticed that the smaller RG wire,the regular coax cable that the cable company ran into our building electrical room is bonded to our GES with what looks like a number 12.Is this normal?
Only grounding on entrance is required by the NEC.your saying the bonding in the electric room is required,OK. I believe we still have the outside box ground block not being tied into our GES, So theres two areas they ground. The outside coax is large,I think its a #10 core. The small one from that point to the electric room, don't know the size. So if we bond to the building GES these two are ok to be in parallel.
AFAIK.yes, but the one in the electric room is OK also.even if NEC deosn't require it.
Your post didn't exactly say the grounding block was in the electrical room... and I don't know how far inside that is either. Grounding is similar to service or building power disconnecting means location, i.e. outside or inside nearest the point of entrance... with no specific distance provided (or maybe there is... haven't looked in several years...A few post up I thought you were indicating the elct rm ground block was required.
Only if that ground rod is replaced with an 8' rod and bonded to the GES.... IMOIm sorry,the smaller coax is about 35 feet into our electric room.So let me recap, right now they have a large lateral from power pole to our building siding,There they drove a 5 foot ground rod,and connected that box to there ground rod.Then the take the small black coax,the stuff we see all through houses etc,and run it 35 feet into our electric room.They bond that to our GES. Is this al NEC Compliant now?
Difference here is the service disconnecting means happens to be where the GEC needs to land, or any accessible location on the supply side of the SDM. That SDM is limited to "nearest the point of entry", but a GEC could run all the way through and to the far end of a building to reach the water pipe entry to the building, or any other electrode for that matter.AFAIK.
Your post didn't exactly say the grounding block was in the electrical room... and I don't know how far inside that is either. Grounding is similar to service or building power disconnecting means location, i.e. outside or inside nearest the point of entrance... with no specific distance provided (or maybe there is... haven't looked in several years...).
Exactly....
Communications grounding maybe no different. I didn't look in code either, but is possible you need a ground block near point of entry, but any grounding conductor that leaves that block could possibly run all the way across the building before there is something you are able to tie it to. If the serving utility wants an electrode right near the entry they could drive a rod, but that still doesn't relieve bonding to the grounding electrode system.
Utility companies don't have to comply with NEC, in particular on their side of the demarc point.I agree,but isn't it true that if the building has GES, and utility decided to drive a ground rod they need to use 8 foot rod and minimum #6 run to building GES.