brycenesbitt
Senior Member
- Location
- United States
Question:
Under engineering supervision, what latitude if any does the engineer to count
heat rather than wires? Anyone dealt with a situation that required it, and how did it go?
--
The situation:
An electrical room with a 2" existing rigid conduit and pull string, empty.
It leads roughly 30" through a post tension slab to a garage below.
The game is to get as many circuits as possible through that conduit without having to core the slab again.
They have to be individual circuits.
Wires will be landed on terminal blocks such as Eaton 14002-4, then on to eventual OCPDs.
But they're of mixed types.
Some are continuous loads, some not.
Some are low voltage control cables.
Some are at different capacities with different OCPDs.
--------------------------------
Assuming they were all the same type, do I have it about right?
But can better be done?
Or maybe
--------------------------------
Can the distance to the terminal block be considered to reduce the actual terminal temperature:
75C Terminal block --------------20 feet of wire at 70F ambient --------- 30 inch of conduit ------------ 20 feet of wire at 90F ambient ----- 75C terminal
--------------------------------
So apparently the #10's are the best for this formula, no?
But the question was about 310.14(B). The way I'm reading it the engineer discretion is only to apply a formula on an individual
wire, not a total load calculation on a bundle of wires. Is that a correct reading? Could an engineer look at this entire system of wires (continuous loads and non-coincident loads) and do a temperature calculation instead for the inside of the 30 inch constrained conduit ? Or a measurement?
Under engineering supervision, what latitude if any does the engineer to count
heat rather than wires? Anyone dealt with a situation that required it, and how did it go?
--
The situation:
An electrical room with a 2" existing rigid conduit and pull string, empty.
It leads roughly 30" through a post tension slab to a garage below.
The game is to get as many circuits as possible through that conduit without having to core the slab again.
They have to be individual circuits.
Wires will be landed on terminal blocks such as Eaton 14002-4, then on to eventual OCPDs.
But they're of mixed types.
Some are continuous loads, some not.
Some are low voltage control cables.
Some are at different capacities with different OCPDs.
--------------------------------
Assuming they were all the same type, do I have it about right?
- #8 wire at 90C, start at 55A per 310.16
- Apply 50% factor, so down to 27.5 amp.
- 36 total #8 conductors for the 2" conduit ("Jam probability 9%" per south wire). 37.64% fill OK.
But can better be done?
- #10 wire at 90C, start at 40A per 310.16
- Apply 45% factor, so down to 18 amp.
- Now we're good to 66 #10 conductors for the 2" conduit ("Jam probability 13%" per south wire).
Or maybe
- #12 wire at 90C, start at 30A per 310.16
- Apply 35% factor, so down to 10.5 amp.
- Now we're good to 102 #12 conductors for the 2" conduit ("Jam probability 16%" per south wire). 38.52% fill.
--------------------------------
Can the distance to the terminal block be considered to reduce the actual terminal temperature:
75C Terminal block --------------20 feet of wire at 70F ambient --------- 30 inch of conduit ------------ 20 feet of wire at 90F ambient ----- 75C terminal
--------------------------------
So apparently the #10's are the best for this formula, no?
But the question was about 310.14(B). The way I'm reading it the engineer discretion is only to apply a formula on an individual
wire, not a total load calculation on a bundle of wires. Is that a correct reading? Could an engineer look at this entire system of wires (continuous loads and non-coincident loads) and do a temperature calculation instead for the inside of the 30 inch constrained conduit ? Or a measurement?