2017 NEC, Article 225.18(4) would indicate Yes, 18ft, "Driveways on other than residential properties ".Am I reading correctly that a driveway or any car traffic on commercial property bumps the hight of service drop conductors to 18’?
can I have only car traffic on commercial property and stay with 12’ clearance?
is it same for feeders?
Thank you in advance.
Most the time yes it really is up to utility, most do apply NESC, not all apply it entirely either though.The heights of service drops are outside the scope of the NEC. They are covered by the NESC, the one that the utilities use. I believe that in most cases the two sets of rules match up, but not always.
If this is really a service drop and not "service conductors, overhead" you need to talk with your utility as they have jurisdiction.
In general, if the utility is installing the conductors they are a service drop, if the EC is installing them they are "service conductors, overhead".
Are sure? I just ask because service conductors overhead are quite rare in my experience.I am on 2008 so the wording ‘service drop’ was used with a wrong meaning. It should have said: service conductors, overhead.
Am I right that
Clearance on Commercial property with pedestrians only is 10’ (120V to ground)
Clearance on commercial property with car only traffic is 12” (120 V to ground)
Interesting, I never noticed that. They changed the definition of "service lateral" after 2008. Also for "service drop" it does not reference where the service point is.I am sure 2008 doesn’t use the correct language
Maybe they cleaned it in later editions
On the same page they use
III. Underground Service-Lateral Conductors
I wasn't sure what year the changes happened but from what darekelec has mentioned it must have been 2008."Service conductors, overhead" and "service conductors, underground" are on the load side of the service point and customer owned and installed. Service drops, and service laterals are on the line side of the service point and are utility owned and installed.
That code change was made to clarify what is customer owned and covered by the NEC and what is utility owned and covered by the NEC. The NEC starts at the service point, so service drops and service laterals are not covered by the rules found in the NEC.
Not sure why service drops and service laterals, are even in the NEC as they are outside the scope of the NEC.
Around here the "service point" is also the ownership and who pays. Line side of the service point is on the utility, load side on the customer. So I use those terms interchangeably.The whole key to all this was the addition of the term "service point" - which is the line between customer equipment covered by NEC and utility equipment not covered by NEC. Who own's or paid for what sort of doesn't matter it is what is deemed to be the "service point".
Who owns what often factors in but is not definite everywhere.Around here the "service point" is also the ownership and who pays. Line side of the service point is on the utility, load side on the customer. So I use those terms interchangeably.