anon23
New member
- Location
- San Diego, CA USA
Does the NEC code allow for a single-phase 3-wire panelboard meant for 120/240VAC to be supplied by a single-phase 2-wire 120VAC source by jumpering both the A and B bus together if only 120VAC is needed?
Does the NEC code allow for a single-phase 3-wire panelboard meant for 120/240VAC to be supplied by a single-phase 2-wire 120VAC source by jumpering both the A and B bus together if only 120VAC is needed?
I got no problem with it as long as you do not jumper off a lug listed for 1 conductor. Polaris type connections or split bolts are usually needed.
How would you rule if you saw a panel that had A-phase fed with 120-volts and B-phase fed with a neutral (in a gas station so 2-pole breakers could be used in place of switched neutral breakers)?
Most of the gas stations I see now require all of the dispensers to be on the same phase. Most of the time a sub panel is set with a contactor or shunt trip breaker (controlled by E-stop switch/s) to kill the power to the equipment. The SWN breakers are about twice as much as 2-pole breakers.
There may be an issue in that the power for the 208-240V submerged pumps would need to come out of the main panel and the E-stop would depend on the control power from the dispensers dropping out the coil of the power relay for the feed to the sub pump. I understand some people don't like that.
Yes, in order to meet 514.11 without interrupting the other dispensers.Do you put each dispenser on its own circuit?
The manufacturers require each dispenser to be on a separate circuit.If the pump is remote type, the load of dispensers is not that much.
It's been a while for me too, so I might be out of date too.I have to admit I have not done retail type fuel dispensers in a long time, maybe 15 years, so I don't necessarily know what current practices may be.
