Re: 1600A service
Medium voltage terminations have been rated 90C for some time; in fact, I can't remember when they weren't. That rating is buried in the IEEE standards though, not the UL standards. UL evaluates MV switchgear and Transformers to the IEEE standards as well as their own.
The Category Code almost all electrical equipment is evaluated to is AALZ, "Equipment for Ordinary Locations." That is the fundamental standard that Section 110.14(C) was based on. AALZ requires not only the terminal but the equipment it is installed in to be evaluated before a 90C terminal rating may be applied.
I did a quick scan in the UL (1558) and IEEE (C37.20.1) standards for low voltage switchgear and couldn't find 90C recognized for terminal ratings.
The search was by no means exhaustive, but I'm curious which manufacture is offering 90C rated terminals in their low voltage switchgear.
Why are so many electrical engineers in a rush to see how marginal their design can be in industrial applications?

I believe the NEC is excessive in many places but conductor ampacities is generally not one of them. Frankly, I believe the reason we've gotten excessive in many other areas, is because conductor ampacities are often too marginal.
Edit added: Present company excepted, of course.
[ July 21, 2004, 03:05 PM: Message edited by: rbalex ]