60 amp GFCI required vs recommended

crtemp

Senior Member
Location
Wa state
I have a hot tub that has a nameplate rating of 48 amps but in the instructions it says that a 60 amp breaker is "recommended". Would this be a requirement as it doesn't say it is required?
 

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I don't think thats a 110.3(B) requirement but what size breaker and wire are you thinking?

It might be fine on a 50A I would not go higher than a 60A I have never seen a 70A GFCI. The GFCI part does not care about OCPD size.
I'd go with mfr recommendation, or calculate the load for the branch circuit per 210.19 / 210.20.
The 60A is probably more to do with the motors, you'd have to add them all up to see.
The pump is probably the only continuous load.
 
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I don't think thats a 110.3(B) requirement but what size breaker and wire are you thinking?

It might be fine on a 50A I would not go higher than a 60A I have never seen a 70A GFCI. The GFCI part does not care, I'd go with mfr recommendation, or calculate the load for the branch circuit per 210.19 / 210.20.
The 60A is probably more to do with the motors, you'd have to add them all up to see.
The pump is probably the only continuous load.
I have a 50 amp on it now with #6 copper running from the disconnect to the tub. The part that sucks is that this hot tub already had the circuit pre-wired and it is only a 50 amp wire feeding it from the main panel, so it would really suck to run a bigger wire and have to abandon what the owner already paid for.
 
I have a 50 amp on it now with #6 copper running from the disconnect to the tub. The part that sucks is that this hot tub already had the circuit pre-wired and it is only a 50 amp wire feeding it from the main panel, so it would really suck to run a bigger wire and have to abandon what the owner already paid for.
I see. Yeah it probably has a blower motor and a pump motor. What did they pre-wire #6 SER?
 
I don't think thats a 110.3(B) requirement but what size breaker and wire are you thinking?

It might be fine on a 50A I would not go higher than a 60A I have never seen a 70A GFCI. The GFCI part does not care about OCPD size.
I'd go with mfr recommendation, or calculate the load for the branch circuit per 210.19 / 210.20.
The 60A is probably more to do with the motors, you'd have to add them all up to see.
The pump is probably the only continuous load.
doesn't the nameplate account for all of this (motors)?
 
As long as that nameplate is using the 125% factors for the largest motor and the heating element, you should be fine. Startup surge on spa pumps is typically really short and a thermal magnetic breaker has no problem riding through that at nameplate amps.
 
I've dealt with this several times.
48V X 125% = 60A
40V X 125% = 50A

So if the tub specs say 40A, it gets a 50A breaker
48A gets a 60A breaker

I've never actually measured current on them, I just go by the running amps as stated.
 
I've dealt with this several times.
48V X 125% = 60A
40V X 125% = 50A

So if the tub specs say 40A, it gets a 50A breaker
48A gets a 60A breaker

I've never actually measured current on them, I just go by the running amps as stated.
I just looked up the current version of UL 1563 and section 71.1 (page 114) says the marked supply circuit ampacity shall be 125% of the current rating of the product and it does not mentions 125% of a motor so it appears UL requires 125% of everything.
 
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