Isaiah
Senior Member
- Location
- Baton Rouge
- Occupation
- Electrical Inspector
Just to be sure, conductors from the secondary side of a CPT in a combination motor starter are NOT considered Class 1 remote control and signaling circuit as per 725.41
725.41(B) makes it a Class 1 Remote-Control and Signalling circuit, then 725.43 sets the OCPD requirements.
Keep in mind the NEC sets forth 2 different types of "Class 1" circuits: Power Limited and Remote-Control and Signalling. Power Limited requires a special power source and is limited to 24V (technically 30V, but nobody uses that). Remote-Control and Signalling has no special power supply rating, and can be up to 600V, which is where your secondary of a CPT fits. Both require OCPDs though.
725.41(B) makes it a Class 1 Remote-Control and Signalling circuit, then 725.43 sets the OCPD requirements.
Keep in mind the NEC sets forth 2 different types of "Class 1" circuits: Power Limited and Remote-Control and Signalling. Power Limited requires a special power source and is limited to 24V (technically 30V, but nobody uses that). Remote-Control and Signalling has no special power supply rating, and can be up to 600V, which is where your secondary of a CPT fits. Both require OCPDs though.
Yes once you fuse the control circuit and its not a tap you move from Art 430 to Art 725. Important concept here is tap.