Christoph
Master Electrician, Code Official
- Location
- Coopersburg, PA
- Occupation
- Electrical Inspector
Possibly they are referring to two sets of 120V outlets fed by an MWBC homerun?View attachment 22131
This is most likely just a terminology issue for me and i have a couple of guesses but I figure i better ask to be sure:
What does it mean to have homeruns with two networks?
Google search wont get past baseball :roll:
Yes, the term "network" has been used to convey that set of conductors. I have also heard it called a "full boat."I would guess that it's 2 sets of 3 phase with a neutral and EGC. (A-B-C-N-G)
I have run up to five circuits in one conduit but whenever I combine them I upsize the ground and always run neutral and live together.. not an mwbc usuallyDepending on the job, this could give you an edge or make you lose the bid. I am with the others that it means an MWBC. However, I would likely ignore the note if I were building the job. As an estimator, I only but one MWBC per conduit home run anyway so that wouldn't change. But during construction I doubt anyone is going to check. If they do, then I would argue that the statement is not clear, and I would argue code. It is very doubtful one would lose that argument. so with the unlikelihood that it would even be checked doubled by the likelihood that you would win the argument makes the risk/reward a good gamble.
View attachment 22131
This is most likely just a terminology issue for me and i have a couple of guesses but I figure i better ask to be sure:
What does it mean to have homeruns with two networks?
Google search wont get past baseball :roll: