Journeyman63
Member
- Location
- Ft Myers, FL USA
Can a 480 volt panel feeding an MRI machine be fed under the slab using pvc conduit.
Can a 480 volt panel feeding an MRI machine be fed under the slab using pvc conduit.
517.13 Grounding of Receptacles and Fixed Electrical Equipment in Patient Care Areas.
(A) Wiring Methods. All branch circuits serving patient care areas shall be provided with an effective ground-fault current path by installation in a metal raceway system, or a cable having a metallic armor or sheath assembly. The metal raceway system, or metallic cable armor, or sheath assembly shall itself qualify as an equipment grounding conductor in accordance with 250.118.
I assume an MRI would be in a patient care area
Are you talking about the feeder to the panel or branch circuit to the MRI
Edit , would 517.30 Essential Electrical Systems for Hospitals. be applicable to this installation
You are correct.I am referring to the feed to the Panel. I have read the code book on Patient care areas. Which this definitely is. All my branch circuitry in the MRI will be in EMT or non ferrous metals. I just dont see that the Panel is required to be in a metal raceway.
I am referring to the feed to the Panel. I have read the code book on Patient care areas. Which this definitely is. All my branch circuitry in the MRI will be in EMT or non ferrous metals. I just dont see that the Panel is required to be in a metal raceway.
That is a good point David although I think you meant "encased"keep in mind if the panel in question is on the critical branch it can no be schedule 40 PVC unless uncased in concrete
I read the OP as if the conduit was crossing over UNDER the MRI???? If going under an MRI with conduit, the NEC has naught to do with the real potential problems. Not a good thing to even consider in most cases.
You need to have the exact dimensions of the conduit routing, the currents in the conduit, and the time domain plot of the MRI magnetic field of the machine.
Overlay the MRI field on the field produced by the current in the wires - see if there is enough force on the wires to cause them to vibrate and abrade thru the PVC over time.
Thanks, since it pvc conduit, assumed everyone would take the meaning of the 'currents in the conduit' as the currents in the wires. Good education in being more precise with language.