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![]() wrote in message ... On Nov 27, 8:46 pm, Dave Heil wrote: James Barrett wrote: But somewhere along the line somebody in the ham groups stated that the National Electrical Code states that there shall be one and *only one* grounding point per power drop and the neighborhood code cops and the insurance companies reportedly get stiff about it. the NEC refering only to the household AC wring(soon hopefully to DC circuts at least according to the local electrical inspector our system for RF are another affair all together the inspector also aprooves the use if desired of seperate eletectal ground when service of more than one voltage and/ot freq is ainvolved in my case I have a houshold from the ower company enterance a seprate gorund for my various solar and wind systems 12-48 v DCdepending on the location plus the seperate Ground from my station most inspector in my experence would rather our rf system were not grounded in to the mais ground since they don't uderstand RF at all |
#2
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konstans wrote:
wrote in message ... On Nov 27, 8:46 pm, Dave Heil wrote: James Barrett wrote: But somewhere along the line somebody in the ham groups stated that the National Electrical Code states that there shall be one and *only one* grounding point per power drop and the neighborhood code cops and the insurance companies reportedly get stiff about it. the NEC refering only to the household AC wring(soon hopefully to DC circuts at least according to the local electrical inspector our system for RF are another affair all together the inspector also aprooves the use if desired of seperate eletectal ground when service of more than one voltage and/ot freq is ainvolved in my case I have a houshold from the ower company enterance a seprate gorund for my various solar and wind systems 12-48 v DCdepending on the location plus the seperate Ground from my station most inspector in my experence would rather our rf system were not grounded in to the mais ground since they don't uderstand RF at all Any electrical contractor will tell you that not all electrical inspectors are well educated or trained. Ive had electrical inspectors state a preference for plastic boxes in a run of metallic conduit or cable. What those inspectors preferred was a direct violation of the National Electrical Code. I've had electrical inspectors try to order me to make a grounding connection in the meter enclosure which was totally unacceptable to the power utility and is not required by the NEC. I've had an electrical inspector fail my installation because I had made the Grounding Electrode Conductor connection to the service entry neutral conductor drip loop to comply with the requirements of the legacy Rural Electrification Administration (REA) power cooperative service standards even though the National Electrical Code specifically permits that location to be used. What the electrical inspector may prefer may be directly adverse to your best interest. Bond all of your Grounding Electrodes together even if your have to wait until after the electrical inspection to do so. -- Tom Horne "This alternating current stuff is just a fad. It is much too dangerous for general use." Thomas Alva Edison |
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