• Welcome to The Building Code Forum

    Your premier resource for building code knowledge.

    This forum remains free to the public thanks to the generous support of our Sawhorse Members and Corporate Sponsors. Their contributions help keep this community thriving and accessible.

    Want enhanced access to expert discussions and exclusive features? Learn more about the benefits here.

    Ready to upgrade? Log in and upgrade now.

GEC - would you consider this subject to physical damage?

Darren Emery

REGISTERED
Joined
Oct 20, 2009
Messages
510
Location
Manhattan, Ks
The concrete crew didn't know the builder planed on a door there - so the CEE ended up in the door opening. The CEE and clamp are flush with the floor surface, the GEC is under about 1/2" of concrete cover. Would you accept this in light of 2012 IRC E3610.2? BTW - GEC is #6 bare copper, just visible where it sneaks out under the door jack stud.

View attachment 2123

View attachment 2123

/monthly_2015_01/572953f28b3d7_Uferunderthreshold.jpg.35ae741855ddea184a037b783d773cec.jpg
 
Only until the door is installed....but isn't it supposed to be accessible?.......E3611.2 Accessibility.

All mechanical elements used to terminate a grounding electrode conductor or bonding jumper to the grounding electrodes that are not buried or concrete encased shall be accessible.
 
steveray said:
Only until the door is installed....but isn't it supposed to be accessible?.......E3611.2 Accessibility. All mechanical elements used to terminate a grounding electrode conductor or bonding jumper to the grounding electrodes that are not buried or concrete encased shall be accessible.
The argument would be: it IS buried in concrete...
 
The connection is buried? Couldn't tell from the picture and apparently I didn't read your post well.....If the clamp cannot be undone (buried), I say OK....
 
Do you allow the CEE conductor to be a #6 copper?

In accordance wit Table 3603.1 footnote d. in part requires; Where the sole grounding electrode system is the footing steel as covered in Section E3608.1.2, the grounding electrode conductor shall not be require to be larger than 4 AWG copper conductor.
 
"GEC is #6 bare copper" Bare copper embedded in concrete? OK, until the concrete corrodes the copper...
 
IRC E3608.1.2 (2) bare copper not smaller than 4AWG

Must be encased by 2-inches

That's what my code reads

pc1
 
You cannot just embed the grounding electrode conductor in concrete to get a ufer. It needs to be in the footing or foundation. 250.52(A)

Metallic components shall be encased by at least 50 mm(2 in.) of concrete and shall be located horizontally within that

portion of a concrete foundation or footing that is in direct

contact with the earth or within vertical foundations or structural

components or members that are in direct contact with

the earth. If multiple concrete-encased electrodes are present

at a building or structure, it shall be permissible to bond only

one into the grounding electrode system.
 
Dennis said:
You cannot just embed the grounding electrode conductor in concrete to get a ufer. It needs to be in the footing or foundation. 250.52(A)
You can if it is a #4....

"or consisting of at least 20 feet (6096 mm) of bare copper conductor not smaller than 4 AWG shall be considered as a grounding electrode."
 
Francis Vineyard said:
Do you allow the CEE conductor to be a #6 copper?In accordance wit Table 3603.1 footnote d. in part requires; Where the sole grounding electrode system is the footing steel as covered in Section E3608.1.2, the grounding electrode conductor shall not be require to be larger than 4 AWG copper conductor.
What's wrong with the #6....not going to get you 200 amps but.......The GEC to the CEE can be #6 but if the wire is to qualify as a CEE it need s to be #4. If it goes to rebar 6 works...
 
The #6 is clamped directly to the vertical rebar, which is wire-tied to the horizontal rebar, well in excess of 20', and near the bottom of the footing. So the #6 is not the part of the CEE, but only the GEC. We now have a clamp "buried" in about 1/8" of concrete. You can see the top of the rebar and just make out the shape of the clamp, in the lower (right) third of the area where the threshold will be.
 
Clamp at CEE must be listed for use with rebar & copper GEC encased in concrete.

Looks like there may be a threshold to be installed at door opening; if so, drilled in anchors can be an issue for damage to GEC.

May be an issue for GEC corrosion if this door location is subject to moisture intrusion or exterior water, can't tell from photo.
 
This is a strange one. If it were up to me I would ask for two ground rods.
 
steveray said:
You can if it is a #4...."or consisting of at least 20 feet (6096 mm) of bare copper conductor not smaller than 4 AWG shall be considered as a grounding electrode."
I understand that but it must be in a footing or foundation not in a slab that may be in the middle of the building.
 
Dennis said:
I understand that but it must be in a footing or foundation not in a slab that may be in the middle of the building.
I ASSUMED that because it was in a doorway it was an exterior foundation wall. From Darren's post 11, that was correct, but I can see your concern Dennis...
 
steveray said:
What's wrong with the #6....not going to get you 200 amps but.......The GEC to the CEE can be #6 but if the wire is to qualify as a CEE it need s to be #4. If it goes to rebar 6 works...
Just to clarify further would you allow a #6 to the water pipe for a 200 amp service too?
 
Francis Vineyard said:
Just to clarify further would you allow a #6 to the water pipe for a 200 amp service too?
That is why I said NOT going to get you 200A.....No....3509.6 to 3503.1....or whatever the NEC says....
 
Back
Top