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Thread: Power supply on acreages
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1st August 2007, 09:08 AM #16
I have had personal experience bringing power to buildings on rural land. The cost of poles are expensive and because of the length of the run it will need a very very heavy cable to avoid voltage drop. This means many poles if you go overhead.
Sparkies licenced to connect to mains will do the job and work out the diameter of the cable. Here they laid three cables to make up the required thickness so pulling it through orange conduit was easier.
Offer your labour and equipment to help keep costs down because most of the work is just plain hard yakka. Good luck.
Whitewood
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1st August 2007, 10:08 AM #17
G'day Michael,
About 6 months ago we had an 80 metre connection done. It cost us just over four grand with us digging the trench and backfilling. The price also included three phase cable, meter box, safety switches, etc.
Cheers,
W.
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1st August 2007, 10:53 AM #18
Two years ago I had my shed re-wired, which included running new cable from the house (suburban Perth). The old cable was some 30 years old inside galvinished steel pipe. I suggest the following course of action:
- Determine exactly the electrical needs of your shed (current and future) e.g. lighting, air cocditioner, power points, the types of machinery that you intend operating etc. Also, have a good look around your shed - once you bring the cable in, where does it go next? e.g. will the sparky have to run it across rafters to get to a power point(s) on the other side of your shed etc. These issues may impact on the type of cabling required, circuit breakers etc. Discuss all this with the sparky.
- Get a quote from 3 qualified electricians on a the basis that they do all the work, including digging the trench or going arial.
- Discuss with the electricians what job(s) that you can do to save money. Get a revised quote on the basis that you will do some of the work. Also discuss whether you should purchase the conduit and cable - you'll probably find that the electrician can get these items far cheaper than you can.
- Also, find out the legal requirements e.g. in Western Australia, the trench must be a minimum of 500mm (18") deep. The sparky should know all this.
- When the trench is open decide whether you want to bring mains water to your shed. Now is the time to do it. In my case, I put reticulation pipe in the same trench (the electrical conduit must go in first).
Once the trench is dug, installing the conduit and pulling the cable through takes very little time, particularly if you act as the sparky's lackey.
HTH
Mike
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1st August 2007, 12:25 PM #19
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1st August 2007, 01:29 PM #20
If the block of land is that big why wouldn't you get the local electricity supply company to run high voltage cable to a pole at the back of the block and have them install a transformer on that pole and then mount your meter box on the pole and then run underground to your shed and to your house when you build it.
This how they usually do it in rural areas. This is how I have it done on my place like this.
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1st August 2007, 01:59 PM #21
However you do it it will be expensive. Also make sure your electrician is certified to climb poles and create new connections. Your electricity distributor should be able to provide you with certified electricians in your area.
In NSW you cannot have just any electrician touching or climbing power poles, I'd guess it's the same in QLD.
If I were you I'd seriously consider solar if you don't need 3ph power in the shed.
My FIL was quoted about $30K for roughly the same distance and I think that was on poles. He has put in solar but doesn't run any serious equipment in his shed apart from the diesel kind.
HH.Always look on the bright side...
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1st August 2007, 04:27 PM #22
Oh Hell everyone else has had 2c worth, my turn now.
Low voltage for 500 metres underground means you would need conductors the size of a small elephants forearm, take into consideration that scrap copper sells for about $7.00/Kg, and you are up for brazillions in cable alone. No matter how many amps you go, in the future you will need to upgrade, this is the law of exponentialelecricityuse.
Low voltage overhead would save little in conductor size.
This leave high voltage, transformer, electricity supplier, yuk.
I dunno, but I doubt in NSW at least they would allow you to do a run that long in underground low voltage.
My estimate for material and installation is $1 Brazillion.Boring signature time again!
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1st August 2007, 07:12 PM #23
Hi All,
Thanks for all the info. I may not have to worry about it after i did some title searchs today and found that an easement runs right through the middle of the property for a gas pipeline from Gatton to Gympie.
I have been assured that it will all ok if it ever goes through. Pipe is buried to a depth of a metre. No construction within 25 metres of pipe but. Doesn't make sense where it runs but. There is an alternative route they could take that doesn't run through as many properties.
Anyone else have a gas pipeline on their property or an easement for one. Would be interested to hear your views.
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2nd August 2007, 08:48 AM #24
Ergon
Hi Mcchaddy,
just wondering how you went with costing. I have a feeling that you're in the same are that I've been looking into lately. The nearest pole with wires is about 300 metres from the block I was interested in. I received a quote from Ergon to have this extended to the block and then a further 50 metres into the property. Wait for it, $19,975... Kind of took the gloss of the block I was interested in.
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2nd August 2007, 04:32 PM #25
Bugman, did that include the cost of a transformer?
We are lucky in the fact that this place already had the power connected to a builders pole when we moved here (right next to the shed we live in, which will be our workshop when the house is ever finished). this was brought sidways through the block so we are well away from the road.
But freinds of mine spent about $9000 5 years ago to connect to a transformer, travell across the road and 30m onto the block. There were only 2 poles used. I think if you are paying for a new transformer, and someone else connects to it within 5 years you get some of your money back.
I know it is expensive moving power, phone etc down the block, but living up on the roadside sort of takes a lot of the gloss off living in the bush. I drive past several homes built close to the road on the dirt road here, and the trees and bushes are always dull with the dust, they also suffer from a lack of privacy. I think I would rather do without a lot of other things inititially than settle for living close to the road. (unless you like sitting on your veranda peering at everyone driving past peering at you)
Next week if i am not working i will go and suss out some quotes for our job. I'd like to connect it to the shed we are living in, and then take it across to the new construction, probably put a box on a post over there till we get close to finishing the house and then get a loan to do the rest of the job.
Donna
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2nd August 2007, 07:42 PM #26
I had a quote in Victoria from Powercor, for connection to the net work IN TOWN on a street that hadn't been developed, but the next street back from the Main Street, $22,000.
I rang them and said there must be mistake, they said 'I' had to allow for the additional customers in the future. I explained that would never be any additional customers because the land next door was my family's land and is used for keeping the bulls in. He then put me onto another bloke, who went on to explain that I had the Rolls Royce version, to which I replied 'I want the mini minor version' he couldn't give me a definiate figure, but said I should get change out of $15,000.
Sort of changed our minds after that. Spoke to another bloke in town that had the wire running past his block on the other side of town, $1,200.
Hard to justify another $13,800.
Regards
Matt
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6th August 2007, 10:07 AM #27
Just found this thread.. not sure if anyone is still looking but i did a few calculations on the size of the conductors required for such a run. For all electrical mains you are allowed a drop in voltage along its length (caused by the cable resistance) of 5% in the case of 3 phase being 415V we get a max drop of 20.75 volts. Taking a few numbers from electrical standards tables the smallest cable you could run on in a three phase situation (underground and allowing a max load of 50 amps per phase) would be 50mm2 (voltage drop of 18.775V). This is bloody huge something you would see powering a workshop in the city or maybe even a small set of shops. God only knows what the cost of that would be even if it is made up of lots of small conductors. Another way is overhead, again poles are expensive but may work out a lot cheaper in the long run, (you may have to pay for a transformer if it is a high voltage supply in the street) this is all assuming there is three phase running down you road in the fist place some rural places in NSW dont have it. Looking at it all i would think for that run, overhead would be cheaper and probably the transformer closer to the house wold save you the voltage drop along the lines.
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6th August 2007, 08:10 PM #28
are you hoping to sub-divide at a later date ?
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6th August 2007, 08:46 PM #29
Hi All,
Went for a good look around the block on the weekend with GPS in hand. The best house site is 320mtrs from the front of the block. But there is creek in between this. The cost of running power to any of the possible good house sites is way to much then we are willing to pay.
We have decided to look for something else.
Thanks to everyone for there comments and advice.
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1st September 2007, 09:21 PM #30
You should get a cost comparison for photovoltaic solar system compared to running a fixed line in - you might well be surprised - and possibly eligible for a government grant too.
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