RickHoegberg
Member
- Location
- Fairbanks Alaska
I'm finding the language for determining whether there is lightning exposure in 800.90 FPN No. 2 (2) to be problematic. At stake is whether protectors are needed for a comm run.
See the FPN for the NEC text.
Using standard parsing based on the punctuation to derive clauses, I get 3 clauses, any one of which allow you to omit protectors: (1) Interbuilding cable runs <= 42m (2) directly buried or in underground conduit (3) continuous metallic conduit bonded to the building GES at each end.
However, this only makes logical sense if (1) AND (2). However (3) then seems to just hang out there. I'll spare everyone from translating the clauses into formal logical statements.
What I suspect is some copy editor mistake and misplaced commas.
A tiny bit of editing gives us something much more logically coherent:
Interbuilding runs of 42 m (140 ft) or less directly buried, or in underground conduit where a continuous metallic shield or a continuous metallic conduit containing the cable is bonded to each building GES.
In this revision, lightning exposure is avoided if: (1) Directly buried cable is limited to 42 m (2) Cable in conduit of any length is bonded at both ends to the building GES.
The current NEC code is ambiguous about whether cable in conduit is limited to 42 m - unless - it is bonded.
My contention is that buried metal conduit of 42 m is a greater lightning attractor than 42 m of direct buried so it doesn't make sense to argue
that the 42 m limit applies equally to directly buried cable and unbonded metal conduit. That's why I think the 42 m limit applies only to the direct buried cable and lengths for metal conduit is irrelevant. What is relevant for metal conduit is whether it is bonded at both ends.
Comments? Other interpretations?
See the FPN for the NEC text.
Using standard parsing based on the punctuation to derive clauses, I get 3 clauses, any one of which allow you to omit protectors: (1) Interbuilding cable runs <= 42m (2) directly buried or in underground conduit (3) continuous metallic conduit bonded to the building GES at each end.
However, this only makes logical sense if (1) AND (2). However (3) then seems to just hang out there. I'll spare everyone from translating the clauses into formal logical statements.
What I suspect is some copy editor mistake and misplaced commas.
A tiny bit of editing gives us something much more logically coherent:
Interbuilding runs of 42 m (140 ft) or less directly buried, or in underground conduit where a continuous metallic shield or a continuous metallic conduit containing the cable is bonded to each building GES.
In this revision, lightning exposure is avoided if: (1) Directly buried cable is limited to 42 m (2) Cable in conduit of any length is bonded at both ends to the building GES.
The current NEC code is ambiguous about whether cable in conduit is limited to 42 m - unless - it is bonded.
My contention is that buried metal conduit of 42 m is a greater lightning attractor than 42 m of direct buried so it doesn't make sense to argue
that the 42 m limit applies equally to directly buried cable and unbonded metal conduit. That's why I think the 42 m limit applies only to the direct buried cable and lengths for metal conduit is irrelevant. What is relevant for metal conduit is whether it is bonded at both ends.
Comments? Other interpretations?