Wow, what a great response. I love this place.
I tried to keep things simple with my question, because I was interested in the procedural approach to the conduit-and-pull-rope assembly task, and I know that mixing overconfidence and naievete can be more dangerous than explosives. And I do blow stuff up from time to time, speaking figuratively (well, in most cases...)
Let me add some more info. There's some great help here for me, but some of it's diverging on issues where matters are solidly in hand. (But the concerns are valid, and I appreciate the precautionary attention to them.)
I'll try to address the existing areas of contention but it's gonna have to get longer and more detailed than simply working out the best method of running line through 1500 ft of conduit. But since y'all asked, here we go:
Item: Get in touch with the PowerCo.
Not to worry. I'm very much in touch with PowerCo. My contact is the engineering manager for the region. I've been in contact with the field engineering department since 2007 on an annual basis while I cleared land and built critical infrastructure. I've had three site visits. We just finished a feasibility analysis that evaluated overhead and underground alternatives from several dimensions.
Potential approaches from the two closest high voltage sources (east and west) were considered, with attention to factors of terrain, easement access and permissions, overhead and underground materials and labor costs for PowerCo to supply the physical transmission infrastructure, and the customer-borne cost to provide the cleared land dimensions required for each transmission path and method. The fact that I am in a mountainous region with slopes 45 degrees and greater in places, and that the unimproved land I own is densely forested including old growth hardwoods, is a significant variable.
Full cost scenarios were performed for each approach direction and transmission method. Each cost scenario included PowerCo cost passed on to customer as a requirement of the installation, as well as the customer-borne cost to clear the forested path necessary for each transmission method. Under rural extension requirements, the customer bears the full cost of clearing along the transmission path.
I should also note that this project is not designed to supply residential power at this time. I have the geographical exposure, altitude, and soil type to support the Christmas tree and fruit orchard I am building. This requires infrastructure in advance of crop planting--a well capable of agricultural irrigation, planting locations relative to the well (distance and elevation considerations), necessary outbuildings including equipment barn, workshop, office, boondock living quarters, and so on. The location of the service entrance as a distribution point for secondary power runs to existing and planned infrastructure is also a critical design consideration.
The non-residential status of the land determines the costing approach as well as the portions that the customer and power company pay for. The rural extension non-residential classification for power transmission places almost the entire cost burden on the customers.
Folks, it's gonna be expensive and I am just one guy who's managed to get this far by excruciatingly tight resource management and a metric buttload of sweat equity. I don't have the resources of a wealthy family or corporate entity backing me. I'm a working-class schlub with two full time jobs and a time-phased dream feeding on carefully planned cash flow.
Issue: Voltage drop over distances! V=IR!
I'm right with you. I'm an engineer. I won't bore you with my professional resume and I won't try to impress anyone--I'm here asking for help. I have facility, control system, machine, and circuit design and implementation experience. You can't do this stuff without a thorough understanding of spark juice. Unlike the commercial world, on my farm, I can have a meeting with investors, management, engineering, finance, HR, construction, production, legal, facilities, landscaping, legal, IT, maintenance, customer service, and janitorial staff... in a two-hole outhouse. You get the picture--DIY, baby. I've timbered, stumped, and cleared land, built, wired, and plumbed outbuildings from slab to ridge vent, cut and graded roads, just like many self-sufficient folks here. (See why TractorByNet is useful to me?)
I've learned to research, plan, and execute, and I'm 100% responsible for consequences, no safety net. It's not what you think you know, it's what you thought you knew that you really didn't know that gets you. I'm not 20 and omniscient anymore. I do know I've got zero experience with the task of threading pull rope through over a quarter mile of conduit. I figured the collective experience here would be a great way to avoid costly mistakes of inexperience.
The 1500' of conduit will carry the
high voltage feed to a
pad mount transformer adjacent to the agricultural well house where the service entrance has been approved by PowerCo and is in the process of county permitting. The design that PowerCo and I created together supplies 600A to the service entrance. The box there will feed 50A to the well house (deep well, 5 hp pump), then from there drop runs of 100A to equipment barn and shop, 50A to the temp living quarters (RV), with 400A remaining capacity to supply future ~4000 sq ft home and office complex to be constructed in fall 2013.
Powerco engineering manager who will oversee the operation on site provided me with the Sch40 3" PVC elec conduit spec. He also spec'd
1/4" nylon rope which his crew will use to thread their own pull wire for a mechanical puller.
PowerCo supplies and pulls the high voltage insulated cable. PowerCo spec'd 24" wide sweep ells at entrance, at junction box (future supply point spec'd by PowerCo for adjacent property owner) at 500' (2), and at transformer. (PowerCo did *not* spec Sch80 for the ells--double checked this.) Said the 1000' segment would not need pull box at halfway point. All this will be documented in the detail design doc/drawing I will use for permitting. Signed off by both me and PowerCo.
Project management's doing good, but all steps of execution are not complete and defined at the sub-task level. I admit it--I want to look like I've got my act together in front of the PowerCo Sr Engineer. I didn't want to ask *him* the process question about threading the conduit--not his area of responsibility. I want to be able to deliver my commitment to have a trench with threaded conduit as spec'd ready when the PowerCo install crew arrives. So I thought to ask here to see what I could learn. You guys didn't disappoint, nosirree! I sure as heck do not know it all.
Issue: Moisture in Conduit
This has been discussed with PowerCo contact. Some condensation due to thermal variation expected, high voltage feeder cable has very thick insulation designed for this. The industry standard of cemented conduit (thank-you!) in 36" min depth (code for my county) will be followed. PowerCo also specs sand or screened fill dirt fill for cuts through rock where long term incremental abrasion can create fractures. Conduit will be oriented male-to-female to facilitate smoothest cable pulling. (thank-you!)
Issue: Why aren't you just going with poles--less expensive, right??!
Again, rural extension requirements and my individual use case, distance, thick forest, and steep terrain are impacting factors. Non-residential service, Customer pays all cost and negotiates all easements to clear power path. Customer must clear and remove all trees, vegetation, undergrowth 40' across entire length of pole path. If trenched, customer clears trenching path (app 10'). PowerCo will trench or Customer can perform trench work at own expense. Same with the conduit. PowerCo rates for trenching and conduit are $$$$. PowerCo contact has approved use of existing cleared easement road (with conduit) for trench path which is shorter run than pole path. Pole path crosses road 3 times due to terrain slope, longer runs. Pole path requires more complicated easement agreement and must plan for clearing, stumping and disposal of timber / stumps to neighboring property owner's specifications. So, let's think of DIY man felling, limbing, bucking, stumping, removing timber and slash in very dense forest (40' to 120' tall pine, oak, poplar, black gum) for ~1700 ft x 40 ft zone to facilitate the "cheaper" option of overhead power. How long would it take you fellas to do all that with only a helper for a 40' wide 1/3 mile long path through thick briery steep sloped woods, working 2 10 hour days on weekends? Vs trenching existing, flat, NO clearing-required road which follows shortest possible path. (And I have a trenching contact who owes me money and will trench this job for under $1/foot...)
This might be unacceptably long for this forum, but expanding the problem description to include scope, qualifications, research, contacts, approach, planning, permitting, scheduling, and execution sure does suck up text space. And the somewhat-interesting-to-read-without-feeling-like-work forum factor goes all to heck. But, it seemed the best way to address the Monte Carlo scenario questions that arose from my brief initial question and the cautious approaches from you concerned folks with experience. Thanks if you made it this far and are still reading.
I don't think I know it all. I know da** well I don't. I'm no genius. I'm just a guy who's willing to do the homework and the sweat work, to bust butt to make a lifelong dream happen on a budget and conservative financial approach. Not afraid to do any kind of hard, hot, or dirty job, but have learned well the value of leased wisdom from veterans in the (I think it's appropriate here) "trenches".
I've got my hands full, folks, but with a little help and guidance and a lot of sweat, planning, and determination, I can do this too. Nobody special, just a guy lookin' for some help in a hands-on process I've not done before.
Thanks for all the tips and reminders. I'll post updates as the process moves forward. I'll be honest and share screwups as well as successes. DIY man gotta keep it real, otherwise finance and HR and investors all kick my butt, and I hate beating myself up without help.
Best
Chip
Robiefield Mountain Farms