wire sizing 400 amp residential

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Stevenfyeager

Senior Member
Location
United States, Indiana
Occupation
electrical contractor
Its been a long time since I did an overhead 400 amp (all the POCOs around here call it a 320 amp actually) residential service. The meter base has double lugs line side so I intend to parallel the riser conductors with 4/0 AL in a 2 1/2 " riser. (with (2) 2\0 neutrals) Serves (2) 200 amp service panels. 3" riser necessary ? Does this sound correct ? Estimating stage. Thank you.
 

James L

Senior Member
Location
Kansas Cty, Mo, USA
Occupation
Electrician
Its been a long time since I did an overhead 400 amp (all the POCOs around here call it a 320 amp actually) residential service. The meter base has double lugs line side so I intend to parallel the riser conductors with 4/0 AL in a 2 1/2 " riser. (with (2) 2\0 neutrals) Serves (2) 200 amp service panels. 3" riser necessary ? Does this sound correct ? Estimating stage. Thank you.
You should get a spec sheet from your POCO because they can require what they want.

I have 5 POCOs to deal with, and they are not all the same
 

augie47

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Tennessee
Occupation
State Electrical Inspector (Retired)
Throw a little fly in the ointment.. I don't believe parallel, 4/0s in one conduit will meet the required ampacity once derated.
 

wwhitney

Senior Member
Location
Berkeley, CA
Occupation
Retired
Throw a little fly in the ointment.. I don't believe parallel, 4/0s in one conduit will meet the required ampacity once derated.
So you're saying that 240.4(B) doesn't apply when 310.15(B)(7) is used, because 240.4(B) refers to the ampacity of the conductors, while 310.5(B)(7) just refers to the rating of the service? The ampacity in the example would 328A, for a service rating of 395A.

Cheers, Wayne
 

Dennis Alwon

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Location
Chapel Hill, NC
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Retired Electrical Contractor
400 amps * .83= 332 amps conductor- which is necessary for the 400 amp service on a residence. You would have to de-rate 80% because of the number of conductors in a conduit. 4/0 aluminum is good for 205 amps at 90C--- 205 * 2= 410.... 80% of 410= 328 which is what Wayne had.

Since you need conductors good for 332 amps then IMO, 4/0 is not enough but if the power company has the say in this who am I to argue
 

infinity

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Staff member
Location
New Jersey
Occupation
Journeyman Electrician
400 amps * .83= 332 amps conductor- which is necessary for the 400 amp service on a residence. You would have to de-rate 80% because of the number of conductors in a conduit. 4/0 aluminum is good for 205 amps at 90C--- 205 * 2= 410.... 80% of 410= 328 which is what Wayne had.

Since you need conductors good for 332 amps then IMO, 4/0 is not enough but if the power company has the say in this who am I to argue
I agree if the portion of the installation that has the parallel #4/0's is subject to the NEC then the conductors are too small. You really need to know the calculated load.
 

Jraef

Moderator, OTD
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Location
San Francisco Bay Area, CA, USA
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Electrical Engineer
Just had to comment...
400A residential? I would hate to have to pay that power bill. Is electricity dirt cheap in Indiana? Here in Calif. we are going to be pushing 40 cents/kWh pretty soon.
 

augie47

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Location
Tennessee
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State Electrical Inspector (Retired)
If you wish to avoid calculations, etc, you could parallel 250kcmilAL which would still be allowed in a 3" rigid riser;
 
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augie47

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Tennessee
Occupation
State Electrical Inspector (Retired)
Just had to comment...
400A residential? I would hate to have to pay that power bill. Is electricity dirt cheap in Indiana? Here in Calif. we are going to be pushing 40 cents/kWh pretty soon.
Thank goodness for TVA. TVA rates < 10 cents per kwh.
400 amp residential services are farily common.
 

Dennis Alwon

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Staff member
Location
Chapel Hill, NC
Occupation
Retired Electrical Contractor
Just had to comment...
400A residential? I would hate to have to pay that power bill. Is electricity dirt cheap in Indiana? Here in Calif. we are going to be pushing 40 cents/kWh pretty soon.


I have done a few 600 amp services for residences. You get all electric in a large home plus 2 car chargers at 50 amps each along with pool, hot tubs etc and it can calculate up there. One house we did had 5 heating systems....

I may have been able to get by with a 400 amp service but it would have been close and with some customers you know you have to figure there will be more.
 

James L

Senior Member
Location
Kansas Cty, Mo, USA
Occupation
Electrician
Just had to comment...
400A residential? I would hate to have to pay that power bill. Is electricity dirt cheap in Indiana? Here in Calif. we are going to be pushing 40 cents/kWh pretty soon.
I had a stretch when I was doing new houses, everything I did for 2-1/2 years had a six hundred amp service. Houses were 6000 - 10000 square feet.

The last I did a calculation on my electric bill, it came out to about $0.17
 

don_resqcapt19

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Illinois
Occupation
retired electrician
Just had to comment...
400A residential? I would hate to have to pay that power bill. Is electricity dirt cheap in Indiana? Here in Calif. we are going to be pushing 40 cents/kWh pretty soon.
Wow....just got our bill...11.06 cents per kWH, including all taxes and fees. The actual power is about 4.25 cents and the delivery change is about 3 cents. (downstate IL)
 

Greentagger

Senior Member
Location
Texas
Occupation
Master Electrician, Electrical Inspector
Service conductors are required to be sized not less than maximum load to be served. 230.42.
 

hornetd

Senior Member
Location
Maryland
Occupation
Journeyman Electrician, Retired
400 amps * .83= 332 amps conductor- which is necessary for the 400 amp service on a residence. You would have to de-rate 80% because of the number of conductors in a conduit. 4/0 aluminum is good for 205 amps at 90C--- 205 * 2= 410.... 80% of 410= 328 which is what Wayne had.

Since you need conductors good for 332 amps then IMO, 4/0 is not enough but if the power company has the say in this who am I to argue
You are the Electrician who is responsible for compliance with the National Electric Code for anything on the premise side of the demarcation point. In most areas the demarcation point, which is set by the State's utility regulatory agency, is the splices between the drop and the Service Entry Conductors. Since the conductors in the mast are, by definition, Service Entry Conductors that mast is NEC all the way and what the POCO thinks is OK with them is of absolutely no import. I have seen POCO staff and AHJ inspectors nose to nose over this a few times and the POCO fella always lost the argument. POCO staff often believe that everything up to or down to the meter is governed by the National Electrical Safety Code but in most jurisdictions they are wrong.

--
Tom Horne
 
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