Using caution in applying to labels per 110.24 might mean printing a high available fault current value while using caution for the requirement of 110.16B might actually be the opposite because if you’re going to put it on a label you better make sure that the circuit breaker will actually clear at the fault current level that’s there within the time that you state that it will. Because people are going to be making decisions about PPE based on that. If you put a higher fault current value in your calculation you run the risk of not having verified that the circuit breaker will actually operate in the time listed. It wasn’t such a big deal before because you could just take the cautious route but now you have to do a more complex calculation unless you want to have multiple labels on the equipment for multiple purposes which would just cause confusion. The problem is that AC impedance for things like the service conductors in between the transformer and service disconnect is actually not that simple of a calculation. And the NEC doesn’t specifically say that it’s acceptable to use just the DC resistance, so in addition to the problems you have with getting information from the utility, you now have the burden of making a decision on how to do this calculation and bearing with it the liability.
Adding to this is the new 240.87 requirement that you document that the circuit breaker clearing time when put in maintenance mode is below the available arcing current, which is actually different than the fault current and even more of a calculation involving many variables in order to achieve.
I think they should do a number of things:
1. There should be a proposal to the national electrical safety code that they add a rule requiring utilities to provide when a customer requests and whenever they change their system, what the available fault current is at the point of transition of ownership.
2. I think the NEC should specify what tables to use for calculating this impedance.
3. For 240.87 I think they should invest in doing some research in work to standardize products and come up with some kind of simpler system involving tables that’s more prescriptive when it comes to calculating available or concurrent because it has way too many variables to be something required by an installation standard without any details. They could work to standardize clearing times on circuit breakers. They could develop a table that may be requires certain clearing times based on the supplying transformer kVA and impedance percentages. Requiring a calculation of available arcing current is something that involves so many variables and it’s a topic of various IEEE papers. Those papers are often written by engineers with doctorate degrees and unlike things like Ohm’s law, they’re still changing in theory of how it should be calculated.