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essacm

Member
Location
meriden ct
Occupation
electrical contractor
I recently installed pvc outside and an inspector is requiring I use an expansion coupling is this accurate I looked up the code article and found the average temp difference in my city which is a high of 80 and a low of 40 would I then do the math off the difference he thinks its off of how hot and how cold a place can get which I think is inaccurate thoughts ?
 
So with a 40°F difference in temperature the length change would be 1.62" per 100 feet. A 15' run would have a length change of 0.243" so a bit over 15' will require an expansion fitting. In my area we can easily have 120 degrees of temperature differential so a bit over 5' requires an expansion fitting.

In my opinion it is based on the average lowest and highest temperature over a year to determine the change in length. While there isn't an adder for direct sun exposure, there probably should be.
 
It’s for a overhead service it’s 15’ up hits a 90 and then less than 3’ to a weather head
According to Don's calculation at 15' with less than 1/4" of expansion an expansion fitting is not required.
 
This is what is in question
So the real question is what temperature change are you required to use in the calculation. You're permitted to have up to 1/4" of raceway expansion without requiring an expansion fitting. If the inspector agrees with you using 40°C as the temperature change than with only 15' of raceway no expansion fitting is required.
 
I recently installed pvc outside and an inspector is requiring I use an expansion coupling is this accurate I looked up the code article and found the average temp difference in my city which is a high of 80 and a low of 40 would I then do the math off the difference he thinks its off of how hot and how cold a place can get which I think is inaccurate thoughts ?
You are in Connecticut and your low is 40 degrees? I am in Florida, it was 32 degrees here yesterday. Low 30 high 98 that is 68 degrees. That is 2.84 inches per 100 feet. That is .25/.0284=8.8 feet before I have to put an expansion fitting. The first time i did this math I was surprised because I hadn't seen an expansion fitting, ever. It is one of the things I made sure to teach in 2nd year apprenticeship. Since both of my current county inspectors are former students, I am guessing they enforce this in my area.
 
It looks like he is using “average” high and low temps, which is not what should be used in the case, IMO.
Does this code section actually say how you find the temperature? Here in NJ at a CEU seminar they told us 60° F. No one really knows is my suspicion.
 
Does this code section actually say how you find the temperature? Here in NJ at a CEU seminar they told us 60° F. No one really knows is my suspicion.
I don’t think it does, but at some point, common sense has to play. How could you not consider the entire range the installation will be exposed to?
 
I don’t think it does, but at some point, common sense has to play. How could you not consider the entire range the installation will be exposed to?
I have no idea. This section is so poorly written it can be interpreted 5 different ways. Why doesn't it simply say the range is from the historical low to the historical high or a derated value to allow for temperature diversity?
 
I have no idea. This section is so poorly written it can be interpreted 5 different ways. Why doesn't it simply say the range is from the historical low to the historical high or a derated value to allow for temperature diversity?
Maybe it needs an Informational Note like the one found in 310.15(B)(2)

Informational Note:
The ASHRAE Handbook — Fundamentals is one source for the ambient temperatures in various locations.
 
I also suspect the movement numbers using the calculation equation they give you. Has anyone ever confirmed this movement, especially with modern PVC? I have a run of about 40 feet outside and put an expansion fitting on it. I marked it with a sharpie in the summer. In the winter, it looks like that mark moved about 1/4 inch at most. 40+ degree difference and it does not move much.
 
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