Smart $ said:
My initial thought (the post I deleted, which then got removed entirely) was to use a multi-disconnect meter pan combo and split off 1? and 3? feeders...
winnie said:
I would rather have a separate single phase panel and three phase disconnect than a three phase panel with one bus essentially unused.
winnie said:
I would prefer to have a separate single phase and 3 phase panel, especially with the 208V to neutral running around a high leg service.
IMHO best value would be having a small 3 phase panel or single 3 phase disconnect, and a 200A single phase panel, with the B leg conductor sized for the small panel, and A, C, and N sized for the service as a whole.
Sierrasparky said:
Why not use 1 single phase panel fed from the meter and a 3 phase 30 amp switch fed from the same meter also. You can get stacking lugs if side by side will not fit.
Upon reflection (and pricing), I have come to agree with you guys. I would like to use a 3ph panel for the 3ph load, and a 1ph panel for everything else. Of course, this leads to several new questions:
1a) I have sized the service conductors at #3/0 for the main panel's 200a breaker. If I add another service panel, such as a 12-space main-lug, to contain the 3-pole breaker, I now have 230a worth of main breaker.
1b) Starting at the meter, the minimum allowed in a meter larger than 100a is #4. Being a 200a meter, would I be allowed to supply a 200a panel as well as a second, smaller one, or do I need to step up to a 320a meter base?
1c) Must the line-side-of-the-meter #3/0 now be upsized, say to #4/0, even though it will be carrying the same calculated load?
2) I take it that, for the load-side of the meter, the high-leg conductor should match that of the line side, as well as the other two lines. I can fit three #4's and a #10 in a 1" EMT, I think.
3a) This means I need a high-leg lugs to fit #4, as well as two double lugs, each one to receive one #3/0cu and one #4cu. Anyone know of double lugs with different-sized holes. or a range that covers both sizes?
3b) Sierra mentioned stacking lugs, which I take to mean taller, but not wider, than a single lug. This would be good, since the studs are fairly close, and the high-leg must connect to the meter's C-phase.
From Dominion Power's Blue Book: