Temporary Emergency Generator Installations

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superdave02

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Electrical Consultant
Every hurricane/typhoon season I post a question about our installations. Here is where I am at this year. Our Temporary Emergency Generator installations are not covered by the NEC. They are addressed by OSHA though. Anyway, these FEMA generators, do they need a ground rod or not, that is the question. They are not a separately derived system. Thoughts?
 
The NEC has 3 articles on generators, 700, 701, and 702. Please review those articles as what you call an emergency generator may be an optionally required standby generator. An emergency generator has very strict rules.
Generator grounding is in Art 250.
What determines your generators being covered by OSHA? OSHA does adopt the latest NEC.
Why are your generators not separately derived?
 
The NEC does not cover Temporary Emergency Generators. We use various connection points on a building or structure. The neutral is not switched and a transfer switch is not used.
Thoughts about if a grounding electrode is needed?
 
Every hurricane/typhoon season I post a question about our installations. Here is where I am at this year. Our Temporary Emergency Generator installations are not covered by the NEC. They are addressed by OSHA though. Anyway, these FEMA generators, do they need a ground rod or not, that is the question. They are not a separately derived system. Thoughts?
Then you don't need a ground rod.
 
The NEC has 3 articles on generators, 700, 701, and 702. Please review those articles as what you call an emergency generator may be an optionally required standby generator. An emergency generator has very strict rules.
Generator grounding is in Art 250.
What determines your generators being covered by OSHA? OSHA does adopt the latest NEC.
Why are your generators not separately derived?
Separately derived would require switching the neutral.
 
If I am not mistaken when you are awarded a contract by FEMA they send you a FEMA Contractor Handbook, in that they require installations to comply with the 'most recent edition' of the NEC. They have their own inspectors that inspect your work, that are also trained to work with the local AHJ. So there is no getting around the NEC with FEMA.
 
Every hurricane/typhoon season I post a question about our installations. Here is where I am at this year. Our Temporary Emergency Generator installations are not covered by the NEC. They are addressed by OSHA though. Anyway, these FEMA generators, do they need a ground rod or not, that is the question. They are not a separately derived system. Thoughts?
There needs to be an equipment grounding conductor from the generator to the building grounding electrode system.
 
There needs to be an equipment grounding conductor from the generator to the building grounding electrode system.
Our generators are bonded and so are the buildings main disconnects, so if we have a neutral we don't install a EGC for obvious reasons. These installations are not code compliant.
 
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