type11969
Member
- Location
- Philadelphia, PA
Greetings. I'm an electrical engineer working at a product development firm in Philadelphia. We are designing a novel water heating device for a client that will be drawing up to 100A, either 240 or 208VAC. We are familiar with the UL requirements for the device, and some of the NEC implications, but ultimately we would like feedback from professional electricians about how they would prefer to connect to such a device (especially considering that the wire gauge is not trivial from a routing perspective). To be clear, I read the FAQs and I'm not looking for specific instructions, installation methods, etc, I would merely like to get the opinion of actual electricians regarding the following:
1) Is a single 100A+ circuit in a residential retrofit application a non-starter (assuming there is not sufficient capacity in the existing box)? If we subdivide to two 50A circuits (understanding that we can't parallel the connection at the device per NEC), does this buy us anything from an installation perspective - or since a subpanel will need to be added, does it not matter?
2) If the installation is occurring in a new home build, does that lessen any of the concerns from #1?
3) Assuming the existing panel has sufficient capacity, or a subpanel has been installed, is routing cable capable of carrying 100A too much of an installation headache, or not that big of a deal? We are assuming this would be aluminum wire and would take the appropriate precautions at the connection point. Again, does two 50A circuits make this problem more manageable/cost effective?
4) Assuming 100A+ cable is being run to the device, is it more common to find cable bundles including a neutral line (3 wire plus ground), or without (two wire plus ground)?
Any insight appreciated! Please let me know if this is still in violation of forum rules and I will pull the post.
-Chris
1) Is a single 100A+ circuit in a residential retrofit application a non-starter (assuming there is not sufficient capacity in the existing box)? If we subdivide to two 50A circuits (understanding that we can't parallel the connection at the device per NEC), does this buy us anything from an installation perspective - or since a subpanel will need to be added, does it not matter?
2) If the installation is occurring in a new home build, does that lessen any of the concerns from #1?
3) Assuming the existing panel has sufficient capacity, or a subpanel has been installed, is routing cable capable of carrying 100A too much of an installation headache, or not that big of a deal? We are assuming this would be aluminum wire and would take the appropriate precautions at the connection point. Again, does two 50A circuits make this problem more manageable/cost effective?
4) Assuming 100A+ cable is being run to the device, is it more common to find cable bundles including a neutral line (3 wire plus ground), or without (two wire plus ground)?
Any insight appreciated! Please let me know if this is still in violation of forum rules and I will pull the post.
-Chris