Rick Christopherson
Senior Member
Hi All,
I've been away for a while, and I am sure I was deeply missed, right?
Anyway, I am designing a stand-by inlet panel to get temporary power into facilities easily when they loose power. This is a modular system using parallel 4/0 cam locks ranging from 1 to 10 conductors per phase (400 to 4000 amps).
I just wanted to make sure there wasn't something I was missing, but when I looked through 250.66, it appears that a single 4/0 (actually 3/0) grounding conductor is all that is needed for anything up to the 4000 amp ceiling I am putting on this design. I haven't worked with systems this large before, so I was surprised that I can have a grounding conductor being less than 1/10th of the feeders. Is this correct, or is there something else I am missing?
I've been away for a while, and I am sure I was deeply missed, right?
Anyway, I am designing a stand-by inlet panel to get temporary power into facilities easily when they loose power. This is a modular system using parallel 4/0 cam locks ranging from 1 to 10 conductors per phase (400 to 4000 amps).
I just wanted to make sure there wasn't something I was missing, but when I looked through 250.66, it appears that a single 4/0 (actually 3/0) grounding conductor is all that is needed for anything up to the 4000 amp ceiling I am putting on this design. I haven't worked with systems this large before, so I was surprised that I can have a grounding conductor being less than 1/10th of the feeders. Is this correct, or is there something else I am missing?