CIRCUIT PROTECTION
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Protectors
are surge arresters designed for the specific requirements of communications
circuits. They are required for all aerial circuits not confined
with
a block. (Block here means city block.) They must be installed
on all circuits with a block that could accidentally contact power
circuits over 300 volts to ground. They must also be listed for the
type of installation. Other requirements are the following:
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Metal
Sheaths of any communications cables must be grounded or interrupted
with an insulating joint as close as practicable to the point where
they enter any building (such point of entrance being the place where
the communications cable emerges through an exterior wall or concrete
floor slab, or from a grounded rigid or intermediate metal conduit).
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Grounding
conductors for communications circuits must be copper or some other
corrosion-resistant material, and have insulation suitable for the
area in which it is installed.
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Communications
grounding conductors may be no smaller than No. 14.
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The
grounding conductor must be run as directly as possible to the grounding
electrode, and be protected if necessary.
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If
the grounding conductor is protected by metal raceway, it must be
bonded to the grounding conductor on both ends.
Grounding
electrodes for communications ground may be any of the following:
-
The
grounding electrode of an electrical power system.
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A
grounded interior metal piping system. (Avoid gas piping systems for
obvious reasons.)
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Metal
power service raceway.
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Power
service equipment enclosures.
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A
separate grounding electrode.
If the
building being served has no grounding electrode system, the following
can be used as a grounding electrode:
-
Any
acceptable power system grounding electrode.
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A
grounded metal structure.
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A
ground rod or pipe at least 5 feet long and 1/2 inch in diameter. This
rod should be driven into damp (if possible) earth, and kept separate
from any lightning protection system grounds or conductors.
Connections
to grounding electrodes must be made with approved means. If the power
and communications systems use separate grounding electrodes, they
must
be bonded together with a No. 6 copper conductor. Other electrodes
may be bonded also. This is not required for mobile homes.
For mobile
homes, if there is no service equipment or disconnect within 30 feet
of the mobile home wall, the communications circuit must have its own
grounding
electrode. In this case, or if the mobile home is connected with
cord and plug, the communications circuit protector must be bonded to
the mobile home frame or grounding terminal with a copper conductor no
smaller than No. 12.
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