Feeders Vs Branch Circuits

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theophilus88

Professional Architectural Engineer
Location
St. Louis, MO
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Professional Architectural Engineer
Greetings to any knowledgeable engineer,
Given the following layout, which are examples of feeders and which are examples of branch circuits? I assumed they were all feeders, but I was uncertain as to whether the conductors between HVAC equipment and a panel would be considered a feeder or a branch circuit. I am assuming most conductors that serve motor loads are considered feeders, but just wanted to verify? Also, is there a cutoff to where motor load equipment conductors are considered feeders and branch circuits? Please help.

 

roger

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Even though your attachment isn't showing I know the answer to your question but since I'm not an engineer I will refrain from answering.

Roger
 

jtinge

Senior Member
Location
Hampton, VA
Occupation
Sr. Elec. Engr
Even though your attachment isn't showing I know the answer to your question but since I'm not an engineer I will refrain from answering.

Roger

Per the NEC,

Branch Circuit. The circuit conductors between the final overcurrent device protecting the circuit and the outlet(s). (CMP-2)

Feeder. All circuit conductors between the service equipment, the source of a separately derived system, or other power supply source and the final branch-circuit overcurrent device. (CMP-2)

If the panel contains the last overcurrent protection device before the HVAC eqiupment, by definition, the conductors between the panel and the HVAC equipment would be branch circuit conductors.
 

roger

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Per the NEC,

Branch Circuit. The circuit conductors between the final overcurrent device protecting the circuit and the outlet(s). (CMP-2)

Feeder. All circuit conductors between the service equipment, the source of a separately derived system, or other power supply source and the final branch-circuit overcurrent device. (CMP-2)

If the panel contains the last overcurrent protection device before the HVAC eqiupment, by definition, the conductors between the panel and the HVAC equipment would be branch circuit conductors.

Well you are an engineer but are you a "knowledgeable engineer"

Roger
 

charlie b

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Lockport, IL
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I am assuming most conductors that serve motor loads are considered feeders, but just wanted to verify?
Actually, the opposite is true.

Also, is there a cutoff to where motor load equipment conductors are considered feeders and branch circuits?
Yes, and jtinge named it. It's the final overcurrent device before you get to the load. But I will put it another way. Consider the complete path of power flow from,
1 The overhead lines along the nearby street,

2 To the line that drops down the pole and goes underground to the service transformer,
3 To the line that runs from the transformer secondary into the building's main service panel,
4 Through one breaker on that main panel to a distribution panel,
5 From one breaker on that panel to a branch circuit panelboard, and finally,
6 From one breaker on that panel to the motor.

Lines 1 and 2 belong to the utility company, and are not addressed in the NEC.
Line 3 is called the "service conductors."
Lines 4 and 5 are called "feeders."
Line 6 is called a "branch circuit."
 

steve66

Senior Member
Location
Illinois
Occupation
Engineer
I am assuming most conductors that serve motor loads are considered feeders, but just wanted to verify?

Part of your confusion may be caused by some common slang.

Most people refer to the conductors serving a motor as a "motor feeder". But going by the NEC definitions, they are usually "motor branch circuit conductors" and not feeders at all.
 

oldsparky52

Senior Member
Most people refer to the conductors serving a motor as a "motor feeder". But going by the NEC definitions, they are usually "motor branch circuit conductors" and not feeders at all.
If the motor disconnect has OCP, then it's a feeder and if the motor disconnect does not have OCP it's a branch circuit?
 

infinity

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New Jersey
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If the OCPD at the motor is supplementary overcurrent protection it would still be a branch circuit from the OCPD to the supplementary OCP device.

240.10 Supplementary Overcurrent Protection. Where
supplementary overcurrent protection is used for luminaires,
appliances, and other equipment or for internal circuits and
components of equipment, it shall not be used as a substitute
for required branch-circuit overcurrent devices or in place of
the required branch-circuit protection. Supplementary over‐
current devices shall not be required to be readily accessible.
 

jtinge

Senior Member
Location
Hampton, VA
Occupation
Sr. Elec. Engr
Thank you gentlemen for your additional clarifying comments to my original response. The reason I leverage so heavily on this forum.
 

Carultch

Senior Member
Location
Massachusetts
Greetings to any knowledgeable engineer,
Given the following layout, which are examples of feeders and which are examples of branch circuits?

Feeders are the aggregate circuit that serves a distribution device (panelboard, load center) containing multiple branch circuits. Feeders connect subpanels from the main panel, or the main panel from the service equipment.

Branch circuits connect the branch overcurrent device (e.g. branch breaker) to each load. Or to a daisy-chained group of loads, as is the case with receptacle and lighting circuits. The way to tell that it is a branch circuit, is that it will not have multiple paralleled overcurrent devices on the load side of the circuit.

In both cases, you can de-energize the feeders and branch circuits with customer-owned disconnects. Service conductors come ahead of feeders, ahead of the main service disconnect, with the essential difference being that you need the utility to shut down your service, to de-energize them.
 

theophilus88

Professional Architectural Engineer
Location
St. Louis, MO
Occupation
Professional Architectural Engineer
Thank you everyone for your responses! These are definitely helpful. One thing that still bugs me is in regards to feeder/ circuits that serve a motor. Lets say you have a motor load being served from a main distribution panel. The conductors serving this equipment would be considered feeders would they not? Now let's say you have this same motor load being served from a branch panel (assuming our load is under 100A). Would the conductors serving the motor load from our branch panel be considered a branch circuit even though they are the same motor load? Let me know your thoughts.
 

ggunn

PE (Electrical), NABCEP certified
Location
Austin, TX, USA
Occupation
Electrical Engineer - Photovoltaic Systems
Thank you everyone for your responses! These are definitely helpful. One thing that still bugs me is in regards to feeder/ circuits that serve a motor. Lets say you have a motor load being served from a main distribution panel. The conductors serving this equipment would be considered feeders would they not? Now let's say you have this same motor load being served from a branch panel (assuming our load is under 100A). Would the conductors serving the motor load from our branch panel be considered a branch circuit even though they are the same motor load? Let me know your thoughts.

Isn't that a distinction without a difference? Would it make a difference to your wiring method if you called it one as opposed to the other?
 

jim dungar

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Wisconsin
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PE (Retired) - Power Systems
..served from a main distribution panel. ...served from a branch panel

The origin of the circuit is immaterial, as is its size. All that matters is the location of the final overcurrent protective device. effectively, Feeder circuits terminate in branch overcurrent protective devices while Branch circuits terminate in loads.
 

Dennis Alwon

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Location
Chapel Hill, NC
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Retired Electrical Contractor
I have said this before and I have tried to re-write the code on this but it is absolutely ridiculous to consider the wire from a panel to a fused disconnect a feeder but from the disconnect to the unit is a branch circuit.

When I questioned the cmp about it one of them said the entire circuit is a branch circuit but it is not by the NEC definitions that were already posted.

My proposal was something about if the conductors between the panel and , let say, an a/c unit only served the one piece of equipment then it was a branch circuit. It is very odd because if I install a fuseless disconnect then the entire run is a branch circuit. Install a fused disconnect and now the circuit is changed....
 

ggunn

PE (Electrical), NABCEP certified
Location
Austin, TX, USA
Occupation
Electrical Engineer - Photovoltaic Systems
I have said this before and I have tried to re-write the code on this but it is absolutely ridiculous to consider the wire from a panel to a fused disconnect a feeder but from the disconnect to the unit is a branch circuit.

When I questioned the cmp about it one of them said the entire circuit is a branch circuit but it is not by the NEC definitions that were already posted.

My proposal was something about if the conductors between the panel and , let say, an a/c unit only served the one piece of equipment then it was a branch circuit. It is very odd because if I install a fuseless disconnect then the entire run is a branch circuit. Install a fused disconnect and now the circuit is changed....

But, again, does it change anything else besides what you call the conductor run? If not, who cares?

If you plug in a load that is internally fused, does that change the wiring from the panel through the outlet to the fuse into a feeder?
 

Dennis Alwon

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Location
Chapel Hill, NC
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Retired Electrical Contractor
But, again, does it change anything else besides what you call the conductor run? If not, who cares?

If you plug in a load that is internally fused, does that change the wiring from the panel through the outlet to the fuse into a feeder?

Yes he can make a difference as a feeder calculation is different than a branch circuit. A while ago we had a discussion and the example given showed that a larger wire was needed for the feeder-- I believe...
 

jim dungar

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Location
Wisconsin
Occupation
PE (Retired) - Power Systems
If you plug in a load that is internally fused, does that change the wiring from the panel through the outlet to the fuse into a feeder?

An internal fuse usually does not change anything. Supplemental protective devices do not impact the definition of a feeder.
 
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