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cjay876

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  1. Problem solved....4x4x16 held by laborers. its connected and now its on to the easy stuff.... thanks for all the help.
  2. Scope home inspection....ignorance is not bliss, me being a master electrican/control tech don't mean i know everything that's why i ask question when i'm not sure..... how the this thing came up, was the utility company told me it was my responsibility to provide a temporary support for the service since the meter base is not being moved. The addition is starting where the original service drop was. so the service drop is temporary untill the addition is finish.
  3. well this is whats going on. i have a customer who is doing an addition to his house and he needs is service drop to be move to the other side of his house temporarily (they are still living at home.)also when its all said and done he will be upgrading to 400 amps. i was planning to put a few 4x4x16 poles off to the side to mount his service drop and that would fix the problem... whats the maximum distance i can have the poles a part. article "225.6.A" would apply right? P.S. can't put a temp pole they will be living at the home during the process and need all there electrical to be intact
  4. Thanks guys.....
  5. I need you guys' help. I was walking through home depot and I overheard one of the workers bragging to a customer about being a master electrican. His comment to a customer is that, according to the NEC, when mounting a thermostat it should be 5ft above floor level. At that point it dawned on me that I've never heard or seen an article that states this. Is there such an article? (I'm still searching)
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