marmathsen
Senior Member
- Location
- Seattle, Washington ...ish
- Occupation
- Electrical Contractor
Hypothetically...
If I have an outside run of PVC that runs up a wall ~10' then 90° along the wall ~40' then 90° back down the wall ~10' (10' up, 40' over, 10' down) and the temperature range (let's say in Seattle) is ~90°, am I required to have 3 expansion fittings, 1 for each of the straight runs?
Table 352.44 states PVC expands 3.65"/100ft for 90°F temp range, which means any run longer than 6.85' requires an expansion fitting! Wow! Then on top of that, if it were a South facing wall that gets direct sunlight, it's even more exaggerated.
Also, should I be determining the temp difference based on all historical data? That would be 108°F range for Seattle requiring an expansion fitting on runs longer than 5.6'!
If I have an outside run of PVC that runs up a wall ~10' then 90° along the wall ~40' then 90° back down the wall ~10' (10' up, 40' over, 10' down) and the temperature range (let's say in Seattle) is ~90°, am I required to have 3 expansion fittings, 1 for each of the straight runs?
Table 352.44 states PVC expands 3.65"/100ft for 90°F temp range, which means any run longer than 6.85' requires an expansion fitting! Wow! Then on top of that, if it were a South facing wall that gets direct sunlight, it's even more exaggerated.
Also, should I be determining the temp difference based on all historical data? That would be 108°F range for Seattle requiring an expansion fitting on runs longer than 5.6'!