One conduit and one disconnect

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Desreft

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I have an inspector telling me that he "thinks" that the following installation is not code allowed. I asked him for a code reference that says that we are not supposed to do this, but he is asking me for a reference stating that it is allowed. Anyway,...

We did a line side tap of a service as allowed by 2011NEC 705.12(A) (2013 California code). Our tap conductors are routed from the switchboard to a gutter above the disconnect within 10' of the switchboard. From the gutter one single conduit is routed to a fused disconnect for the PV system. This one conduit has the tap conductors and the PV system AC feeders.

The inspector is saying that we need two conduits. One per circuit. So that if the disconnect is OFF, it will be easy to tell which circuits are ON and which ones are OFF.

Can anyone think of a code reference that prohibits this installation?
 
I have an inspector telling me that he "thinks" that the following installation is not code allowed. I asked him for a code reference that says that we are not supposed to do this, but he is asking me for a reference stating that it is allowed. Anyway,...

We did a line side tap of a service as allowed by 2011NEC 705.12(A) (2013 California code). Our tap conductors are routed from the switchboard to a gutter above the disconnect within 10' of the switchboard. From the gutter one single conduit is routed to a fused disconnect for the PV system. This one conduit has the tap conductors and the PV system AC feeders.

The inspector is saying that we need two conduits. One per circuit. So that if the disconnect is OFF, it will be easy to tell which circuits are ON and which ones are OFF.

Can anyone think of a code reference that prohibits this installation?

Ask him if he would accept clearly labeling the disconnect. Running more conduit seems like a solution to a problem that does not exist.
 
The tap conductors are service entrance conductors under 230.40 Exception No. 5. Then there's this...
230.7 Other Conductors in Raceway or Cable. Conductors
other than service conductors shall not be installed in
the same service raceway or service cable.
 
Lazy inspector? It seems to me that if an inspector fails a job that it should be incumbent upon him to reference the language in the NEC backing his decision to red tag it.
 
Inspector was right, but for the wrong reasons. If he would look up the code to support his decision he may have eventually found the right reason.
 
I have an inspector telling me that he "thinks" that the following installation is not code allowed. I asked him for a code reference that says that we are not supposed to do this, but he is asking me for a reference stating that it is allowed. Anyway,...

We did a line side tap of a service as allowed by 2011NEC 705.12(A) (2013 California code). Our tap conductors are routed from the switchboard to a gutter above the disconnect within 10' of the switchboard. From the gutter one single conduit is routed to a fused disconnect for the PV system. This one conduit has the tap conductors and the PV system AC feeders.

The inspector is saying that we need two conduits. One per circuit. So that if the disconnect is OFF, it will be easy to tell which circuits are ON and which ones are OFF.

Can anyone think of a code reference that prohibits this installation?


Along with the comments the others have made, I have a little question about your wording. You state, " to a gutter above the disconnect within 10' of the switchboard." The conductors themselves, from termination to termination need to be less than 10 feet long to utilize the 10 foot tap rule.
 
Along with the comments the others have made, I have a little question about your wording. You state, " to a gutter above the disconnect within 10' of the switchboard." The conductors themselves, from termination to termination need to be less than 10 feet long to utilize the 10 foot tap rule.
If service conductors are involved the tap rules in 240.21 do not apply.
 
If service conductors are involved the tap rules in 240.21 do not apply.
And as I pointed out above (and seems to have been disregarded), if service conductors are involved, you cannot have feeders or branch circuits in the same raceway.

We did a line side tap of a service as allowed by 2011NEC 705.12(A) (2013 California code). Our tap conductors are routed from the switchboard to a gutter above the disconnect within 10' of the switchboard. From the gutter one single conduit is routed to a fused disconnect for the PV system. This one conduit has the tap conductors and the PV system AC feeders.
 
I agree and that is a good point, but I still read his statement as implying that 10 feet away is OK when using the tap rule and just wanted to clarify it.
But there is no "tap rule" when it is service conductors, want to word that differently;)

Service and non service conductors together is the main issue here anyway.
 
But there is no "tap rule" when it is service conductors, want to word that differently;)

Service and non service conductors together is the main issue here anyway.

No, I want you to understand that differently. The OP made the ambiguous statement about the tap rule. At that time he had no concept of the service conductor violation. That was quickly pointed out by the excellent intelligent participation here. It doesn't change the wording the OP used when he was asking about other issues, which is ALL that I was addressing.:cool:
 
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