Subpanel Myth or Fact?

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TwoBlocked

Senior Member
Location
Bradford County, PA
Occupation
Industrial Electrician
An experienced electrician mentioned today that a subpanel can't be fed from a breaker rated at more than 50% of the main panel breaker. Seems like it might be a good idea, but I can't find any article in the NEC that says so. Any ideas where this comes from?
 
An experienced electrician mentioned today that a subpanel can't be fed from a breaker rated at more than 50% of the main panel breaker. Seems like it might be a good idea, but I can't find any article in the NEC that says so. Any ideas where this comes from?
False! It can be fed with what ever the maximum size breaker the panel says the bus bar tabs are rated for!
 
The experienced electrician needs to spend a little more time in the code book.
 
Thanks, guys. I'll keep my eye on him. A lot of moving parts to this project. Fracking brine water. His outfit is running conduit and pulling wire. Mine is making control and communications terminations. We both agree that there were some bizarre design decisions.
 
I have heard something close however it delt with raceway fill up to 80% based on 50% loading.

We should start a myth post in campfire chat.
It was a wild discussion I had with that apprentice.
 
It probably originated with fuse coordination.

If, for example, there were a 100-amp main breaker in the main panel, and a 100-amp branch breaker feeding the subpanel, you couldn't assure that an overcurrent in the branch panel would take out only the branch breaker and wouldn't take out the main breaker instead/also.

But that's a convenience issue, not code or safety.
 
An experienced electrician (said) sub-panel can't be fed from a breaker rated at more than 50% of the main panel
There is a 50% max load if Fastened in Place, for branch circuits in 210.23(A)(2).

Maybe someone who uses 430.6(A)(1) to interpolate horsepower from current, thinks branch rules interpolate to feeders?
 
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