LarryFine
Master Electrician Electric Contractor Richmond VA
- Location
- Henrico County, VA
- Occupation
- Electrical Contractor
No, that's when it is not a CCC.tryinghard said:The neutral is a CCC when only carrying current that is unbalanced load from 1PH (310.15(B)(4)(a)). In other words it has current just unbalanced current and is a circuit conductor shared by 2 different phases. Is this correct thinking?
Picture a balanced 3ph Y MWBC carrying 10a on each line. With balanced loads, neutral carries no current. (Neutral only carries difference currents, not a CCC. That means only three CCC's.)Infinity, how does the neutral carry approximately the same current as the lines of a 3PH wye system?
Now, let's say we reduce the load on one conductor by 2 amps. That means two lines carry 10a, one carries 8a, and the neutral carries 2a. Reduce the 8a to 5a, and the neutral carries 5a.
Reduce the 8a all the way to to 0a, and the neutral now carries 10a. For each amp not carried by the line conductor, the neutral current must carry the same amount of current.
Now, picture a 3-wire circuit supplied from a Y-system. Two line conductors and a neutral. As in the example above, since there's no third line conductor, the neutral sees current. Three CCC's.
Nope. The neutral and the two phases flanking it (i.e., not the high leg) are identical to a 120/240v 1ph system. And I mean identical. The high-leg open Delta started out as a 1ph service.How about a 3PH delta with 3W circuit from phase A & C sharing a common neutral, is this neutral a CCC?