Does anyone know the reference for clearances of air conditioning equipment to an outdoor electric meter? I cannot find it anywhere but I am told it is 4'? I am not sure if that is in front of or laterally?
I think that would fall under NEC 110.26 (Spaces About Electrical Equipment)Does anyone know the reference for clearances of air conditioning equipment to an outdoor electric meter? I cannot find it anywhere but I am told it is 4'? I am not sure if that is in front of or laterally?
Using table 110.26 A 1, a condensing unit falls under "condition 2," with live parts on one side and the wall behind being grounded.I think that would fall under NEC 110.26 (Spaces About Electrical Equipment)
Access and working area "free off obstructions" around the meter has to be a box that is :
Depth - 3.0 - 4.0 feet (depending on voltage and conditions)
Width - width of equipment or 30 inches (which ever is greater)
Height - 6.5 feet
Local codes might be more restrictive.
I asked an RG&E meter reader that very question last year. His basic un-official response was "as long as I can get to the meter without tripping your good-to-go"Does anyone know the reference for clearances of air conditioning equipment to an outdoor electric meter? I cannot find it anywhere but I am told it is 4'? I am not sure if that is in front of or laterally?
read my response!!!!! I said "UN-OFFICIAL response was....."Meter guys are not code officials, so their say-so means zip.
read my response!!!!! I said "UN-OFFICIAL response was....."
the best thing to do in these situations is to call BOTH the town Code Enforcement person AND the local power company. If you get approval from both of them you should be good-to-go.
If they both defer to the other?....use your best judgment.
The condenser I put in front of that meter was moved to install a addition, the code enforcement guy gave them a C of O, so it apparently was not an issue
I guess Im good-to-go then, the customer got a C of O. The condenser is about 18" from the addition and 3½ to 4' from the meter?What I said was that since he is not a code official, his opinion means zip, which means "even his UN-OFFICIAL opinion means nothing."
The power Co is not an entity that can give a code opinion. Most power company equipment is specifically exempted from the code. The utility has ZERO interest in whether your meter meets code regarding it's placement to any other device. Their only care is that it is sealed and works reliably for the billing of power.
The local enforcement person can only give a binding opinion if there is a permit issued and a written approval issued by his office. In a small town, they may be willing to issue an opinion without a permit, but the permits are how they cover their department costs.
That doc means the municipality is satisfied with the requirements that they choose to enforce, either via standards they have adopted, or more stringent standards that they have passed as local ordinances.I guess Im good-to-go then, the customer got a C of O. The condenser is about 18" from the addition and 3½ to 4' from the meter?
it's quite possible that the building inspector doesn't have a clue about the NECThat doc means the municipality is satisfied with the requirements that they choose to enforce, either via standards they have adopted, or more stringent standards that they have passed as local ordinances.
Obviously, they are choosing to not require the nec standard for work area between the condenser and the building.
That is certainly a possibility, since many inspectors use the IRC (International Residential Code) which sources some, but not all of the NEC residential rules.it's quite possible that the building inspector doesn't have a clue about the NEC
But no one has complained yet, :angel:
I had a conversation with an electrician a while back about this. I asked him why, on his new service install, there was not a main breaker at the indoor panel. Instead it was on the outside of the house. He told me the code dictated if the indoor panel was not within x amount of the point of entrance it had to be outside. Why is this ?If you have to extend the service entrance any more than putting a conduit nipple out of the meter base through the exterior wall to the service panel, you have to install an outdoor weatherproof service disconnect which in addition to being expensive its ugly too.
The cable to the service panel is unfused except for the high voltage fuse at the transformer which is often grossly over sized to prevent nuisance trips. They want to limit how much of this unfused cable is inside of a structure. Unless it feeds directly into the rear of the interior panel there will always be some so it's kind of a compromise, making it as safe as reasonably possible.I had a conversation with an electrician a while back about this. I asked him why, on his new service install, there was not a main breaker at the indoor panel. Instead it was on the outside of the house. He told me the code dictated if the indoor panel was not within x amount of the point of entrance it had to be outside. Why is this ?