As someone who does 75%+ supply-side interconnections, this kind of terrifies me. We have another year of NEC 2017 here, so I have time to prepare, but I'm watching this closely.
Meter disconnects/reconnects here are difficult due to the lack of good utility company cooperation and the requirement for an inspection prior to reconnection, which leaves homeowners without power for many hours at times. Otherwise, I would just pop in a 200A main disconnect between the meter and main distribution panel and do a feeder tap for the inverter output between the new service disconnect and the existing distribution equipment. Unfortunately, that usually means bringing grounding electrodes and conductors up to current standards, but that's how we would be forced to comply if this splice/tap rule comes into effect here and there are no suitable products available. Side note: 200A 2-pole fusible disconnects are all but impossible to get here. Even 200A main breaker enclosures are very hard to find. Hurricane Ian didn't help that with thousands of people who had their service equipment under water... It has been a challenge. Jason Szumlanski Principal Solar Designer | Florida Solar Design Group NABCEP Certified Solar Professional (PVIP) Florida State Certified Solar Contractor CVC56956 On Tue, Jan 31, 2023 at 7:56 PM August Goers via RE-wrenches < re-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org> wrote: > Hi Wrenches - > > Occasionally we will do supply side connection for our PV systems. As of > 1/1/2023 in CA, we follow the 2020 NEC 705.11 Supply-Side Source > Connections section. Recently, an inspector asked us to comply with the > following: > > 230.46 Spliced and Tapped Conductors > Service-entrance conductors shall be permitted to be spliced or tapped in > accordance with 110.14, 300.5(E), 300.13, and 300.15. Power distribution > blocks, pressure connectors, and devices for splices and taps shall be > listed. Power distribution blocks installed on service conductors shall be > marked "suitable for use on the line side of the service equipment" or > equivalent. > Effective January 1, 2023, pressure connectors and devices for splices and > taps installed on service conductors shall be marked "suitable for use on > the line side of the service equipment" or equivalent. > > > > When we reached out to one supplier of insulation piercing connectors > (ILSCO), they responded: "We are still in testing, I just checked and from > what I see there are no products listed for this new requirement yet by any > manufacturer." > > Has anyone bumped into this before and/or have any proposed solutions? > > Best, August > Luminalt > _______________________________________________ > >
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