I have been doing risers that are not supporting the service drop in PVC for a while in our area, allowed by our state code and our POCO, the idea of this is because your not going to keep a falling tree or large branch from taking down a service drop, I don't care if you bolt the attachment insulator to a 4x4 across all the stud in the gable, it will take the gable out of the house, and I have seen it do it, so I found that designing it to fail in a more safer manner is much better, by installing PVC, and using the PVC two hole straps, will allow the riser to pull off the wall without damaging the house, or in most cases the wire or meter, it will break the pvc right at of above the meter, and all I have to do to repair it is to disconnect the drop, unhook the conductors from the meter remove the old male adapter glue a new one on and re-strap it to the house, re install the attachment insulator re-hook up the drop and they are back in power in less then 30-45 minutes, the wire don't even short out on the meter as the male adaptor protects it, and many times they even still have power when I get there, now with RMC, most times meter is damaged, riser is bent, service conductors has shorted in the riser or on the broken hub, and a few times it started a fire.
I had one inspector try to say that PVC couldn't be used and it had to be RMC because it was subject to be damaged, so a quick call down state got him straight right away, he then tried to make me use sch. 80, state again over ruled him, so I asked him why he thought it was subject to be damaged, kidding I said what, maybe an airplane might hit it? he wasn't amused but passed it and left.