I got the permit. I also had EWS deliver conduit, a meter panel, a main lug panel, a few 90 degree conduit pieces, brackets, lugs, and a large beautiful J-Box that the city is requiring me to put in(it wasn't cheap).
This is where the meter is going on the house. There's a fair amount that I had to hand excavate
This is the power pole and my rigid metal conduit that will make up the first 10ft. A note, look around when your out walking, it's surprising how many of conduit risers along power poles in Utah. More surprising was they made me put rigid metal conduit in my backyard, yet I see PVC everywhere on public sidewalks.
I had to do some more hand excavation to get the pole down far enough.
There's the green monster, hand excavated out that bench that it sits on. The yard is mostly clay, which when dry and compacted is a bear.
Here it is test fitted together, I need to wrap the metal in tape that will help keep the metal from corroding.
In the end, it all came together nicely. One thing that did take a bit of practice and patience was bending the PVC pipe. I used a blow torch and kept burning and kinking my practice piece. in order for a blow torch to work, you have to be super patient and never keep the torch in one place at all...ever. To get the PVC to temperature takes about 20-30 minutes. The PVC will get super hot, recommended, thick gloves and a damp rag. Then you can bend it how you like without kinking or burning.
Below is the finished meter/panel that I attached with lag bolts and anchors.
Here's a picture of the inside Main lug
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