Yes, the high leg must be “C” in the metering equipment for the meter to work correctly, but is supposed to move to “B” in the service equipment. I have seen several that were done that way too. The reasoning being, if looking at a switchboard front or rear, (freestanding type) the center bussbar is always the high leg.And in the two old facilities I work in with 120/240 delta, the high leg is C. Marked red in one site, orange in the other.
The question was not asking about code or some formal established rule, it was only asking about an industry standard. Once again was this part of a training class?Right, regardless the statement of the questions, I mentioned the only cases that is established the colors for electrical conductors
They were commonly red around here a long time ago, and they are still often called the "red leg" by old timers.Must be a regional thing, never seen the high leg any other than Orange, unless by mistake.
Because from an electrical rotation point of view the high leg has always been B phase. It was just required to be landed in the right hand position in the metering equipment so that the meter would work correctly.Proves a point... but by NEC, you can't use C phase for the highleg... which, is idiotic to me considering at the meter C phase is the high leg, but in the panel it needs to be B. who thought that was a good idea?? (Not related to this post)