mstrlucky74
Senior Member
- Location
- NJ
I know I asked this a while ago but I can't find it. Even though there are 2 phase conductors this is technically considered one circuit, correct? If so why again? Thanks.
I know I asked this a while ago but I can't find it. Even though there are 2 phase conductors this is technically considered one circuit, correct? If so why again? Thanks.
Uf ah... Complicated. Spec says no more than three circuits in a raceway.
............. Needs clarification.
Thanks Gold.Technically a 208 v circuit would be one circuit though, right?
I would say that if there is one (possibly multipole) OCPD it is one circuit.
I can only guess why the specs contain that particular restriction, but it is clearly not an issue of conduit fill, or conductor ampacity. My SWAG is that they just either wanted to keep the wiring from being too hard to trace or they did not want to see too many eggs in one basket in case of damage.Thanks Gold.Technically a 208 v circuit would be one circuit though, right? Clarification as to why is what I am trying to understand.
Uf ah... Complicated. Spec says no more than three circuits in a raceway.
Do the specs also require dedicated neutrals or are shared neutrals allowed?
decicated.
my question is why exactly would a 208v circuit with 2 ungrounded conductors, a neutral and a ground be considered one circuit? I want to be able to explain? Sorry guys for dragging this out:dunce:
Do the specs also require dedicated neutrals or are shared neutrals allowed?
If dedicated neutrals are required, wouldn't you need 2 ungrounded conductors, 2 neutrals and a ground? In that case, I think we would have to call it 2 circuits, not 1 MWBC.decicated.
my question is why exactly would a 208v circuit with 2 ungrounded conductors, a neutral and a ground be considered one circuit? I want to be able to explain? Sorry guys for dragging this out:dunce:
The argument gets somewhat circular, but I would say that if you have only line to line loads and no neutral required, except fir controls, you have one circuit.If dedicated neutrals are required, wouldn't you need 2 ungrounded conductors, 2 neutrals and a ground? In that case, I think we would have to call it 2 circuits, not 1 MWBC.
My understanding is that it's only a MWBC if the neutral is shared, because separating the neutrals prevents the neutral currents from the 2 (or 3) phases from cancelling each other. Separate neutrals = separate circuits.
It would be the same as a dryer or range circuit and is a single circuit. The physics of how current is flowing into and out of the load(s) then back to the source through all of the circuits associated conductors is what makes it a single circuit.decicated.
my question is why exactly would a 208v circuit with 2 ungrounded conductors, a neutral and a ground be considered one circuit?
It would be the same as a dryer or range circuit and is a single circuit. The physics of how current is flowing into and out of the load(s) then back to the source through all of the circuits associated conductors is what makes it a single circuit.
Roger
That helps. If you had a 2 breaker feeding a 208v load would you ever have 2 neutrals?
Thanks Gold.Technically a 208 v circuit would be one circuit though, right? Clarification as to why is what I am trying to understand.
a : the complete path of an electric current including usually the source of electric energy