Here's the scenario:
13,200 Volt 3-phase/4 wire system is supplied from the local utility
company. The service point is on the load side of the cutouts at the top
of a pole, located at the edge of the property.
Customer owned primary is then run down the pole (3-#2
copper, shielded, 133 percent insulation, Type MV-105 (this cable does not
have a (concentric neutral)) to a listed disconnect rated 600 amps and
fused at 125 amps. The disconnect feeds a 2500 kva delta/wye pad mount
transformer which steps the voltage down to 480/277 to feed the building.
Since the system supplied by the utility company is a 4-wire system, is it
required to run a grounding conductor with the MV cable from the top of
the pole to the disconnect and then to the transformer?
I can't find anything in Article 250 THAT REQUIRES a grounded or grounding
conductor to be run with the ungrounded conductors. Part X of Art 250
covers grounding for systems over 1000 volts and it only addresses
grounding requirements if the system IS grounded. 250.24 clearly requires
it for 50 to 1000 volts, but that section doesn't apply to this system.
Or, since the "service point" is at the top of the pole, can the
contractor elect to go with the proposed shielded cable (cable specs
reflect use for an ungrounded system) and supply the premises with an
ungrounding system (all three shields are connected together at both ends)
and derive a grounded conductor/nuetral at the pad mounted delta/wye
transformer?
250.180 states:
"Where high-voltage systems are grounded, they shall comply with all
applicable provisions of the preceding sections of this article and with
250.182 through 250.190, which supplement and modify the preceding
sections."
The difference I see between this section and 250.20 & 250.24, is that
grounding is an option or is permitted for above 1KV, where lower voltage
systems require grounding WHEN SUPPLIED by a grounded system.
Is the fact that the utility system provides a grounded system at the
service point fall under the scope of 250.180, thus declaring it a
grounded system? or does the installer have the option at that point
(which would be the service point) to install a grounded system in
accordance with this section, regardless of the utility supplied system?
Thanks!
Tim
13,200 Volt 3-phase/4 wire system is supplied from the local utility
company. The service point is on the load side of the cutouts at the top
of a pole, located at the edge of the property.
Customer owned primary is then run down the pole (3-#2
copper, shielded, 133 percent insulation, Type MV-105 (this cable does not
have a (concentric neutral)) to a listed disconnect rated 600 amps and
fused at 125 amps. The disconnect feeds a 2500 kva delta/wye pad mount
transformer which steps the voltage down to 480/277 to feed the building.
Since the system supplied by the utility company is a 4-wire system, is it
required to run a grounding conductor with the MV cable from the top of
the pole to the disconnect and then to the transformer?
I can't find anything in Article 250 THAT REQUIRES a grounded or grounding
conductor to be run with the ungrounded conductors. Part X of Art 250
covers grounding for systems over 1000 volts and it only addresses
grounding requirements if the system IS grounded. 250.24 clearly requires
it for 50 to 1000 volts, but that section doesn't apply to this system.
Or, since the "service point" is at the top of the pole, can the
contractor elect to go with the proposed shielded cable (cable specs
reflect use for an ungrounded system) and supply the premises with an
ungrounding system (all three shields are connected together at both ends)
and derive a grounded conductor/nuetral at the pad mounted delta/wye
transformer?
250.180 states:
"Where high-voltage systems are grounded, they shall comply with all
applicable provisions of the preceding sections of this article and with
250.182 through 250.190, which supplement and modify the preceding
sections."
The difference I see between this section and 250.20 & 250.24, is that
grounding is an option or is permitted for above 1KV, where lower voltage
systems require grounding WHEN SUPPLIED by a grounded system.
Is the fact that the utility system provides a grounded system at the
service point fall under the scope of 250.180, thus declaring it a
grounded system? or does the installer have the option at that point
(which would be the service point) to install a grounded system in
accordance with this section, regardless of the utility supplied system?
Thanks!
Tim