Sullishak
--
Installing a new electric
service (2008)

by Dave Sullivan
Ocean-spray salt corroded the 1940-vintage meter base enough
to cause lights to flicker inside the cabin ... so we decided to install a new underground electric service.
March 25-28, 2008


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Top: You can see the old electric meter on the kitchen wall.
It would be fun to keep this meter on the cabin after all the other work is done
-- if the electric company allows us to do that.
Middle: The new meter base will be on the front wall hidden behind the porch's wind
screen. Also visible on the sidewalk is the new service connection box. It will
be dug into the front lawn so that only about 2-inches appears above the lawn.
Bottom: A new breaker panel needs to go
into the living room wall. It should be hidden by a wall hanging. Notice that
this portion of the beach cabin didn't have any insulation -- which helps
explain why the cabin has been so cold in the winter. We will need to install a
100-amp feed from this panel box to the existing panel box above the kitchen
countertop. |
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Dave Helton gets on his hands and knees to inspect the trench
... |
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We called and had all the underground utilities marked
with paint before we started digging. This meant a lot of hand digging ...
because we weren't supposed to use anything but a shovel within two feet of
existing lines. We found several water lines on the other side of the street
near the telephone pole, two telephone lines in the middle of the street,
and a Northwest Natural Gas line on our side of the street. If you look
carefully in this photo, you will see a TV cable line that is cut in half -- we
got a little aggressive with a shovel while digging through the hard pan.
Fortunately, when the cable company came to investigate, they said this cable
was no longer in use. |

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Top: Dave Helton digs by hand ... and the Ditch Witch
is sitting nearby.
Bottom: The Ditch Witch has fallen into its own trench
... and it won't come out easily. We had to buy a Come-Along and winch
it upright again by lashing onto a nearby tree. |
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The top-most part of the 3-inch underground pipes needed
to be a full 36-inches below ground. This required a lot of digging.
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With all the rain, hail, and snow, the trenches soon were
filled with water. We needed to rent a sump pump (which is
mostly hidden behind the pipes) to remove enough water to
install and glue pipes together. |
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Friday morning (March 28, 2008) we awoke to find snow! |
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The view from our property across the street after laying
the 3-inch pipes ... but before laying four 1-inch pipes to hold telephone and
cable-TV lines. |
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This shows what happened when I removed the sump pump --
the trenches filled almost to the brim. I'm using a 2-by-6 to keep pipes
submerged while I shoveled dirt and mud on top of them to fill in the trench. |

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Top: The trench across the road has been covered
up ... but it is sloppy with mud. So I ordered 6 yards of crushed rock to cover
up the mud.
Bottom: This is one of two piles
of rock that I spread by hand ... |
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Almost done across the street. The 3-inch and 1-inch
pipes have been buried, and I've installed the service box where the electrical
connections will be made across the street. Only a little more spreading of
gravel remains. |
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This shows what the street looked like when I finished on
Friday, March 28, 2008. It still looks like a bit of a mess despite spreading
new gravel and filling potholes. There just was too much water to get the road
bed firm again. |
April 26-27, 2008
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Our first task was to cut through the sidewalk with a
concrete-cutting blade on a Skill saw. The hard pan is too hard to dig down
and across at the 3-foot level by hand, so the concrete
sidewalk needed to go. Later, depending on how people want to landscape, it
would be easy enough to replace the sidewalk with a few bags of concrete. |


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Top: Dave Helton begins by digging with the backhoe next to
the cabin.
Middle and bottom: Dave Sullivan operates the backhoe to dig a 3-foot trench all
the way to the road. For a while, Barb Sullivan sat in the
driver's seat and drove the backhoe forward ... while Dave Sullivan operated the
bucket from the rear seat. This definitely speeded the operation up. |
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A slight mistake with the backhoe snapped the sewer line. So we
went to Ace Hardware in Lincoln City to buy replacement line and a couple of
rubber couplings. Here, Dave Helton is cutting the sewer line with a
hand saw. |
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This shows the electrical service line in the bottom of the
trench. |
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Dave Sullivan stands on top of the 3-inch electrical conduit. The
main purpose of this shot is to prove the pipe was buried the full 3-feet deep
as required by the National Electrical Code. |

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Two reference pictures.
These photos are likely to be useful if a cabin is
built on the empty lot. The shovel marks the end of the second
3-inch electrical conduit that crosses the street and heads straight into the
vacant lot. Several feet earlier, the first 3-inch electrical conduit turns
north and heads toward the existing cabin. You can also see the two white 1-inch
conduits for cable and phone lines. The 1-inch conduits are 1-foot less deep ...
and they stop a couple of feet short of where the 3-inch conduit stops. We ran
these currently unused lines several feet further toward the interior of the
vacant lot so it would be easy to find and attach onto them
without disturbing the lines going to the cabin. |

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By Sunday morning, all the major earthmoving had been done, and
the backhoe was loaded onto a trailer. The yard is a mess -- that was an
unavoidable consequence of moving so much dirt to get the electrical line a full
3-feet deep. The backhoe was heavier than is reasonable to tow with a light Ford
Ranger pickup ... and on the way back to Newport, both the pickup and trailer
began swaying back-and-forth violently. Fortunately, enough speed dissipated so
the swaying stopped before the truck and trailer jack-knifed. Still, this was a
very scary incident because we had no control over the vehicles during this
process. |
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Despite the resulting mess, we did try to clean up. You can
see Dave Helton here showing his tongue to Barbara and the camera. |
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This shows the meter base ready for a meter ... |
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Dave and Peggy Helton ... and their dog, Smoke, prepare to
depart. |
July 31 - August 1, 2008
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Nearly all the work on the kitchen panel box has
been completed in this picture. Things that changed included:
- Removing the old service entrance wires
and linking this box to the new main service entrance with a 100-amp
circuit.
- Moving the range circuit to the main
service panel.
- Separating the ground and neutral bars.
- Adding a new 20-amp
double-pole breaker to separate the dryer and cadet heater circuits.
All that remains to be done is adding
insulation to the wall and buttoning up. |

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Top: The main
service panel is now on the front wall. Nearly all wiring has been done in this
image.
Bottom: I added
insulation to this wall as well.
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I bought a used heater at
the local bargain building supply for $10 or $20. |
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All done! Everything is back together (except
that I haven't mounted the spice rack over the stove. Notice the new light on
the front wall. It has a light switch to the right of the service panel. Also, I
mounted a thermostat above the light switch. Thus, we now have "set and forget"
temperature control in the living room. |
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