Engineerintraining12
Electrical
- Mar 2, 2016
- 4
Hello everyone,
This is my first time posting to this forum and I had a question that I've been obsessing about for about a week now. I am an engineer in training and relatively new to this field, so I am still learning on a daily basis. The other day I noticed on one of my previous projects that I undersized my grounding electrode conductor and main bonding jumper. The project had an 800 amp main distribution panel with two sets of 500 kcmil for the service entrance. When I went to size the grounding electrode conductor, I accidentally sized it for only one set of 500 kcmil using table 250.66 in the NEC. Instead of using a 2/0 wire I used a 1/0 for my grounding electrode conductor size as well as my main bonding jumper. I know that having an undersized grounding electrode conductor can lead to the possibility that when there's a fault current, the cable could burn up when transferring the fault current to the grounding electrode, but I wanted to know if being off by one size (1/0 instead of 2/0) poses a huge compromise to safety or if the 1/0 would be able to handle most fault current situations. The project is already built and the contractor may have picked up on the mistake, but I needed some peace of mind on this question. This is a mistake that I surely won't be making in the future.
Best Regards
This is my first time posting to this forum and I had a question that I've been obsessing about for about a week now. I am an engineer in training and relatively new to this field, so I am still learning on a daily basis. The other day I noticed on one of my previous projects that I undersized my grounding electrode conductor and main bonding jumper. The project had an 800 amp main distribution panel with two sets of 500 kcmil for the service entrance. When I went to size the grounding electrode conductor, I accidentally sized it for only one set of 500 kcmil using table 250.66 in the NEC. Instead of using a 2/0 wire I used a 1/0 for my grounding electrode conductor size as well as my main bonding jumper. I know that having an undersized grounding electrode conductor can lead to the possibility that when there's a fault current, the cable could burn up when transferring the fault current to the grounding electrode, but I wanted to know if being off by one size (1/0 instead of 2/0) poses a huge compromise to safety or if the 1/0 would be able to handle most fault current situations. The project is already built and the contractor may have picked up on the mistake, but I needed some peace of mind on this question. This is a mistake that I surely won't be making in the future.
Best Regards