Hi,
I want to bring 2 x 20A (@120V) to a chicken coop. It will be powered from my garage panel which will require 140' of cable. 85' in the garage along 2 walls, and 55' buried between the garage and the coop. I used a few voltage drop calculators and it looks like I will need a 6/3 to stay within 3% drop between the garage and the coop. I will have a dual pole 20A breaker in the garage connected to the 6/3 cable, and then I will share the neutral between the two phases in the coop. Note that the 60A electrical panel of my garage is also fed by the house through a 6/3 cable and it is located at about 50' from the house. In the coop I will have a of GFCI-protected outlets powered by one phase, and another set powered by the other phase.
The questions I have are regarding the best way to accomplish this. Because it is a coop, I don't have much room inside, so I don't want to have a subpanel in there because I could not really meet the 30" workspace requirements. I would like to use a continuous 6/3 NMWU cable. Even if the cable will be buried 24" in the ground, I would like to use a PVC pipe for mechanical protection (not to pull the wire through) between the garage and the coop. In the garage, I will run the wire along two walls at about 8' above grade. My understanding is that mechanical protection is not required if above 5'. Is this correct?
In the coop, I wanted to connect two 12/2 cables to my 6/3 cable in a junction box. My understanding is that I must also use a grounding electrode, according to 2015 CEC, because it is a building housing livestock:
Note that there is no grounding electrode in my garage, it is connected to the ground through the 6/3 coming from the house.
If I need to use a grounding electrode for the coop, should I bind the grounding wires of my two 12/2 to the grounding electrode through a #4 wire in my junction box? Should I leave the grounding wire from the 6/3 disconnected on the coop side? I should not bind the neutral in the coop to the grounding electrode. Is this right?
I will just have a few GFCI outlets in my coop. Is there a need for a disconnect box?
Thanks!
I want to bring 2 x 20A (@120V) to a chicken coop. It will be powered from my garage panel which will require 140' of cable. 85' in the garage along 2 walls, and 55' buried between the garage and the coop. I used a few voltage drop calculators and it looks like I will need a 6/3 to stay within 3% drop between the garage and the coop. I will have a dual pole 20A breaker in the garage connected to the 6/3 cable, and then I will share the neutral between the two phases in the coop. Note that the 60A electrical panel of my garage is also fed by the house through a 6/3 cable and it is located at about 50' from the house. In the coop I will have a of GFCI-protected outlets powered by one phase, and another set powered by the other phase.
The questions I have are regarding the best way to accomplish this. Because it is a coop, I don't have much room inside, so I don't want to have a subpanel in there because I could not really meet the 30" workspace requirements. I would like to use a continuous 6/3 NMWU cable. Even if the cable will be buried 24" in the ground, I would like to use a PVC pipe for mechanical protection (not to pull the wire through) between the garage and the coop. In the garage, I will run the wire along two walls at about 8' above grade. My understanding is that mechanical protection is not required if above 5'. Is this correct?
In the coop, I wanted to connect two 12/2 cables to my 6/3 cable in a junction box. My understanding is that I must also use a grounding electrode, according to 2015 CEC, because it is a building housing livestock:
10-208 Grounding connections for two or more buildings or structures supplied from a single service
Where two or more buildings or structures are supplied from a single service,
(a) the grounded circuit conductor at each of the buildings or structures shall be connected to a grounding
electrode and bonded to the non-current-carrying metal parts of the electrical equipment; or
(b) except for buildings housing livestock, the non-current-carrying metal parts of the electrical equipment in
or on the building or structure shall be permitted to be bonded to ground by a bonding conductor run with the feeder or branch circuit conductors.
Note that there is no grounding electrode in my garage, it is connected to the ground through the 6/3 coming from the house.
If I need to use a grounding electrode for the coop, should I bind the grounding wires of my two 12/2 to the grounding electrode through a #4 wire in my junction box? Should I leave the grounding wire from the 6/3 disconnected on the coop side? I should not bind the neutral in the coop to the grounding electrode. Is this right?
I will just have a few GFCI outlets in my coop. Is there a need for a disconnect box?
Thanks!