jchetty
Well-known member
A person that works electrical jobs is not an electrician. If you (or the sub-contractor) is not licensed, you are not an electrician.
Under no circumstances should you remove your own meter. Out here (NJ), the local utility owns the meter. The meters are placed and removed using 600 volt, electrically-insulated gloves in addition to FR long sleeve shirt, FR pants, hard hat, safety glasses, and safety boots.
Before the meter is put back into service: the mains are opened, the service characteristics are verified, a jumper is installed, and you check for backfeed and grounds (not in that order). Ever seen a meter explode that GT put back in- going phase to ground is a bad day.
Don’t think that pulling a meter is a safe job. It can be very dangerous even if you know what you are doing. When the service is live (underground or overhead feed has not been disconnected), just popping the meter back in is a roll of the dice. You must test your test equipment, do your appropriate tests, and retest your test equipment prior to plugging in a meter.
You should have a licensed electrician do this job. Save money somewhere else. You want that entrance wire examined. If it damaged, fix it ASAP. If that were my panel, I would have it replaced. Looks like too many people were in there and I really don’t like the way it looks.
Under no circumstances should you remove your own meter. Out here (NJ), the local utility owns the meter. The meters are placed and removed using 600 volt, electrically-insulated gloves in addition to FR long sleeve shirt, FR pants, hard hat, safety glasses, and safety boots.
Before the meter is put back into service: the mains are opened, the service characteristics are verified, a jumper is installed, and you check for backfeed and grounds (not in that order). Ever seen a meter explode that GT put back in- going phase to ground is a bad day.
Don’t think that pulling a meter is a safe job. It can be very dangerous even if you know what you are doing. When the service is live (underground or overhead feed has not been disconnected), just popping the meter back in is a roll of the dice. You must test your test equipment, do your appropriate tests, and retest your test equipment prior to plugging in a meter.
You should have a licensed electrician do this job. Save money somewhere else. You want that entrance wire examined. If it damaged, fix it ASAP. If that were my panel, I would have it replaced. Looks like too many people were in there and I really don’t like the way it looks.
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