Isolated ground receptacles

Pinnie

Senior Member
Location
Ohio
Occupation
Commercial Electrician
Consensus seems to be isolated ground receptacles are obsolete, only to be done if the job specs require it. I was reading through 250.146D. I only see where it is permitted to be ran or spliced (or not), not where it is required to be landed. In an old EC&M article, Mike says it is permitted to be landed to the box immediately with the device. https://www.ecmweb.com/content/article/20890911/the-basics-of-isolated-grounding-receptacles. Can someone direct me to the Code article that might clarify the required termination point?
 
There really is no article to cite. IG's are a design issue so there is little guidance within the NEC on how to design and install them. Typcially the IG gets terminated at the service neutral where the MBJ is installed or at a transformer neutral where the SBJ is installed.
 
There really is no article to cite. IG's are a design issue so there is little guidance within the NEC on how to design and install them. Typcially the IG gets terminated at the service neutral where the MBJ is installed or at a transformer neutral where the SBJ is installed.
I’m guessing that’s common practice because the permissive language in 250.146D says the wire can be unspliced passing through boxes, panelboard enclosures etc. for the purposes of being terminated solely at XO or MBJ/SBJ. What’s to stop someone from landing it directly to the box of the device? Purely specs?
 
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