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Power pole question

Chuck McB

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Mar 21, 2012
Messages
745
Location
Alabama
I'm going to be running my home power service underground and will have to put up a pole for the meter box so should I buy a new 6"x6'" treated post or get a used creosote pole cut to length??
 
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hilld

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Jan 19, 2010
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867
Location
Vancouver, WA & San Juan Island, WA
The meter box should go on the outside of the house, unless you are looking for a temp setup during construction, then a simple pole should do the trick, it is not going to stay there very long.
 

jwillis

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Aug 24, 2010
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5,225
Location
SW Ohio
Yeah, why can't you attach it to the house right outside the main breaker box? (Just make sure you don't put the breaker box outside the house)
 
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Chuck McB

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Joined
Mar 21, 2012
Messages
745
Location
Alabama
It will be permanent. My home is located a rather long way from the street and the power company has a secondary pole located between the street and my house. I will have to locate an addition pole of my own between the secondary pole and the house. I thought I could mount the meter box on the pole I install then run underground to a 200 amp power panel mounted on the exterior of the house. I'll be running 4/0 quadruplex with the bare wire removed.
 
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STINEY

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Jan 23, 2009
Messages
279
Location
Bucyrus Ohio
I used a good used pole.

I needed to upgrade to 200 amps from 60, and needed to send 100 amps to my shop, so I killed a few birds with one stone..

And I don't like a meter box cluttering up the side of my house. Just a personal taste thing, no offense to those with that setup.

Since our local power provider covers the cost of overhead wire to the meter, I placed the pole as close to the shop as they would go realistically, then branched out underground to the house and shop. I also was able to incorporate a disconnect at the pole, which is a nice feature as I can shutdown the house and shop separately and the local firefighters really appreciate as well.

Doing it this way cut down on the amount of expensive wire I needed to buy.

Chris010.jpg


My labor was cheap as well.

Chris012.jpg
 
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larry_g

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Apr 28, 2007
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16,889
Location
oregon
attachment.php


Above is how I chose to do my panel. It is 400a and feeds the 200a to the house and 200a to the shop as well as having some breakers in it for the well pump an maybe some future outdoor lighting. The extra circuits served for construction power during the build.

lg
no neat sig line
 

p912s

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Joined
Oct 19, 2008
Messages
74
Location
SW Michigan
Several years ago I had to do something like this to supply power to a house and 3 garages/barns. The driveway was 1100' long and the house was at the end.

The buildings were in 2 different directions from the house. And near where the detached garage for the house was to be built I built what looked like a 3'x3' outhouse using 4x4's for corner posts. It had a shingle roof and T1 siding. Inside was a 200 amp main panel to supply power to each building.

The meter was mounted on the backwall (faced the street) behind the panel.

Had the same siutuation with the power company, they set one pole on the property midway between the road and the power building.
 

Stuart in MN

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Sep 8, 2005
Messages
23,139
Location
Minneapolis
It will be permanent. My home is located a rather long way from the street and the power company has a secondary pole located between the street and my house. I will have to locate an addition pole of my own between the secondary pole and the house. I thought I could mount the meter box on the pole I install then run underground to a 200 amp power panel mounted on the exterior of the house. I'll be running 4/0 quadruplex with the bare wire removed.

Will the service go overhead from the utility pole to your pole, then underground from there? Or is underground from the utility pole to your pole, where it pops up to the meter and then back underground for the rest of the way to the house? If it's all underground you don't really need a pole, you can accomplish the same thing with a couple treated 4x4s bolted together. Also, remember that you're going to need a main disconnect at the meter as that will be your service entrance point.
 

STINEY

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Joined
Jan 23, 2009
Messages
279
Location
Bucyrus Ohio
Stiney how tall is pole and how deep in the ground?

The pole is roughly 25' overall and is in the ground 5'

I simply dug a hole with my backhoe and dropped the pole in and backfilled. Worked great.

The connector thing for the overhead line to fasten to I sourced used from a local electrical supply house. They said just take it - I gave them a $10 and said order a pizza or something.
 
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Norcal

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Mar 16, 2008
Messages
13,765
The first thing is to check your PoCo requirements those will vary from company to company, here in PG&E territory a 25 foot PG&E approved pole set 5' in the ground is required, YMMV, but even if the electrical passes inspection the power co. still has to approve it, and if they don't like it ,no power.......
 
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