Hey look at the pic I just posted it shows what I’m meaningThere are 2 meters feeding two different apts or parts of the building. A neutral is needed for each apt. Not sure -- maybe I misunderstand
I posted a better pictureI see one neutral per weatherhead.
Hmm I don’t know what that means I will try googling it and see what I findLooks like they didn't have a large enough conductor so they tried to parallel two smaller ones. Not compliant at all since I doubt those wires are 1/0 or larger
What would be a reason someone would do that and what would it look like in the meter , would both of those wires be wrapped together to become one wire under one lug then ?It means instead of using a number 2 conductor (not sure what size they needed) they used 2- #6 or so to make the conductor larger
What would be a reason someone would do that and what would it look like in the meter , would both of those wires be wrapped together to become one wire under one lug then ?
Okay that makes sense thanks , any chance it could be #1 on this picture where the grounding conductor comes from the service drop, I’m sure there no way anyone would know by a pictureYes, If the installer didn't have the larger conductor then he could use 2 smaller conductor that equalled the size of the larger one he didn't have, however, I doubt what he did was legal.
I guess not because the grounding conductor comes out of the meterOkay that makes sense thanks , any chance it could be #1 on this picture where the grounding conductor comes from the service drop, I’m sure there no way anyone would know by a picture
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That’s exactly what I was wondering , so that’s kinda what it seems like it’s narrowed down too it’s either parallel neutrals or maybe a gecYou'll have to pull the meter and see how it's terminated to know for sure. As dumb as it sounds it could be a GEC passing through the meter enclosure.