jaggedben
Senior Member
- Location
- Northern California
- Occupation
- Solar and Energy Storage Installer
Subject to interpretation, nope.
There is a reason for the difference.
Which is what? Enlighten us.
Subject to interpretation, nope.
There is a reason for the difference.
Which is what? Enlighten us.
Taps rules clearly states no 240.4 upsizing.
We do no have the same level of protection for a tap as we do for a feeder, part of why length is limited.
Not that I saw. Please cite chapter and verse or else explain your logic in detail.
The OCPD at the load end has nothing to do with that!
:happyno:
Feeder Taps. Conductors shall be permitted to be tapped, without overcurrent protection at the tap, to a feeder as specified in 240.21(B)(1) through (B)(5). The provisions of 240.4(B) shall not be permitted for tap conductors.
...
I appreciate all your replies. I hope I can get the answer as to why.
Gotcha on the citation. It's still a rather baffling entry, in that by definition tap conductors can have an upstream OCPD 'upsized' by practically any number of sizes. One is left to dope out by process of elimination that it must refer to the downstream OCPD.
?
Jag, I have no idea what you just said.
...
But nobody seems to be able to actually explain why the different level of protection although both conductors are protected against overload by the same OCPD...
Gotcha on the citation. It's still a rather baffling entry, in that by definition tap conductors can have an upstream OCPD 'upsized' by practically any number of sizes. One is left to dope out by process of elimination that it must refer to the downstream OCPD.
Me too. That sentence above wasn't added by accident, but I honestly can't imagine what substantiation was provided and how anyone could have been convinced by it. Has there been a thread on the history of that?
That section is not referencing the OCPD upstream of the tap conductor, it is saying that you cant use 240.4(B) for the OCPD where the tap conductor ends.
If you want to supply an 80 ampere load with a tap conductor, you could not use a #4 copper conductor and terminate it in a 90 amp OCPD. The tap conductor has to have an ampacity of at least that of the OCPD that it terminates in.
For example if you had 2 sets of 500 Kcmil THHN conductors (380*2=760 amps) feeding equipment with a load calculation value of 760 amps or less those conductors are considered adequately protected even when you use the next standard size OCPD of 800 amps.
Correct me if I'm wrong please......... but if your load calculations were 761 amps - 800 you would not be able to do this.
Jag, I have no idea what you just said.
That section is not referencing the OCPD upstream of the tap conductor, it is saying that you cant use 240.4(B) for the OCPD where the tap conductor ends.
Okay, I'll try again...
My thought process on first reading that section goes like this:
- I'm imagining a 100A tap to a 200A feeder.
- "The provisions of 240.4(B) shall not be permitted for tap conductors."
- Whadya mean? My 200A OCPD is already way oversized beyond what 240.4(B) permits! Why even say that?!
- oooooooh, you must mean the other OCPD. The 100A one that only protects them from overload, not fault. (It might help if you actually said that.)
- ...and I cannot imagine a scientific justification for making that rule. Either 240.4(B) is okay for preventing overload, or it isn't.
Submitter: Phil Simmons, Simmons Electrical Services
Recommendation:
Revise existing Section 240.21(B) as follows:
(B) Feeder Taps. Conductors shall be permitted to be tapped, without overcurrent protection at the tap, to a feeder as specified in
240.21(B)(1) through (5). The provisions of 240.4(B) shall not be permitted for conductors that are tapped.
Substantiation:
This proposal is intended to clarify the issue of whether these conductors that do not have overcurrent
protection where they originate are required to be not less than the rating of the device or overcurrent
protection they terminate in. Since the tapped conductors or conductors on the secondary of a transformer do
not have overcurrent protection where they originate, it seems logical that they should not be permitted to
round up to the next standard size as provided in 240.4(B). A more logical approach seems to be that the
subject conductors must have an ampacity not less than the rating of the device or overcurrent protection
they terminate in.
Panel Meeting Action: Reject
Panel Statement:
The present text in 240.21(B) meets the submitter's intent. See, for example, 240.21(B)(1)(1)b. The provisions of 240.4(B) are not
permitted for tapped conductors.
Number Eligible to Vote: 12
Ballot Results: Affirmative: 12
You're correct that the conductors after the tap may be a feeder and when they are they're protected just like any other feeder. Up to 800 amps if the conductor ampacity doesn't correspond to a standard OCPD size in 240.6 then you can go up to the next larger standard size but the calcuated load on those feeder conductors still cannot exceed the ampacity of the feeder conductors.
For example if you had 2 sets of 500 Kcmil THHN conductors (380*2=760 amps) feeding equipment with a load calculation value of 760 amps or less those conductors are considered adequately protected even when you use the next standard size OCPD of 800 amps.
I am also confused about same scenario , I Have Load of 600 Amp (Load is Chiller Units , and at Nameplate it is mentioned that OCPD should be 800Amp) , The ampacity of Cable is 882 amp , but once i apply the de-rating factor the ampacity is reduced to 740 amp. Can i use 800 amp CB and is it accepted as per codes. If yes, please mention the Code reference.
The specific reference to 240.4(B) was added to 240.21 a few cycles back because code users were not following the previous language. The previous language required that the tap or transformer secondary conductor have an ampacity not less than the OCPD at the end of that conductor. It is clear that the result was intended when they added the reference to 240.4(B), but not sure of why it needs to be that way.Why not? Because we are making a legalistic argument that the language of 240.21 contradicts 204.4(B)? I admit that I haven't thought about it before and that the language is open to interpretation. (Although I would argue that for other than 10ft taps the language is open to still invoking 204.4(B).)
In that case I'm fairly confident that there is no good reason for the difference. Just code language that says what it says, and probably not intended to produce that result.