Is 310.15(B)(5)(c) applicable to the service entrance neutral (grounded) conductor since this refers to the neutral yet the service entrance neutral in the NEC is referred to as the "grounded" conductor.
Is 310.15(B)(5)(c) applicable to the service entrance neutral (grounded) conductor since this refers to the neutral yet the service entrance neutral in the NEC is referred to as the "grounded" conductor.
Not all "grounded conductors" are necessarily neutral conductors though. Take a corner grounded delta system for example - the grounded conductor is not a neutral conductor. A two wire system also has no neutral, but you very well may ground one of those conductors.
Not all "grounded conductors" are necessarily neutral conductors though. .
correctAnd also we could have a neutral that is not grounded. It would be very rare but is nec permitted at certain voltages.
And also we could have a neutral that is not grounded. It would be very rare but is nec permitted at certain voltages.
For typical premises wiring systems yes, you usually want the neutral grounded. For specialty application maybe not.No, no, no. Don't talk about stuff like that.
I want all my noodles grounded. It gives me a warm and fuzzy feeling so I sleep better at night.
Someone here once mentioned an ungrounded WYE and I believe it has scarred me for life.