He is saying that the meter can should only have one set of feeders on the load side but can not produce any specifications from the poco.
This particular application is a service increase from 200 amps to 320 amps. The existing service is 200 amps with an exterior 200 amp MLO panel that feeds one interior panel, A/C and water heater loads. It has four 2-pole circuit breakers in the panel. I am adding another 200 amp MLO with the 320 meter can. The new or second panel will feed a garage with a 60 amp circuit and pool pump panel also fed from a 60 amp breaker. This will total six main disconnect switches. The poco engineer has per approved the installation, when its time to energize he decides that the meter can not feed two panels
Off subject and may belong in another thread. If so maybe the moderators can move this.
In his description, assuming the breaker serving the water heater is a 30 amp breaker and the breaker feeding the interior panel is supplying neutral loads, is this a lighting and appliance branch-circuit panelboard, requiring a main breaker?
The branch-circuit serving the water heater serves no neutral loads neither would the A/C branch-circuit. The breaker serving the interior panel probably is serving neutral loads but it?s a feeder. I?m a little puzzled and would welcome the opinion of others.
Actually, their printed specifications are here but they don't really say anything about a 320 ampere meter fitting's capacity. :smile:He is saying that the meter can should only have one set of feeders on the load side but can not produce any specifications from the poco.
He is saying that the meter can should only have one set of feeders on the load side but can not produce any specifications from the poco.
He's probably posting about you on another site about how he has to watch those electricians like a hawk as they will try to get away with anything.POCO guys don't always know everything. One I dealt with, who had even been the field engineer on a similar service two years earlier, declined energizing an open-Delta service with a reduced high-leg conductor.
At my insistence, he agreed to check with the guys in his office before he would accept it, even with approval of the city planning reviewer. It ended up delaying us receiving permanent power for over a week.
Yeah, the Field Engineers' Chat And Lounge forum.He's probably posting about you on another site about how he has to watch those electricians like a hawk as they will try to get away with anything.![]()
How did you know about 'that' forum?Yeah, the Field Engineers' Chat And Lounge forum.
Larry you keep saying 320 amps . Just to get the terminology straight adding this 320 amp meter base with 2- 200 amp panels is called a 400 amp service.No Roger, I am saying the existing panel is full. I want to add another panel.
The existing 200 amp service is approximately at 70% capacity. I am increasing it to a 320 and adding a panel next to the existing one.