jaggedben
Senior Member
- Location
- Northern California
- Occupation
- Solar and Energy Storage Installer
Thank you for your response.
That is the crux of the matter, does ErikS's original configuration comply with the spirit of 705.12(D)(2)(3)? If so, then creative interpretations would not be circumventing the spirit of the code language, only the letter of it.
I believe that in ErikS's original configuration, no more than 400A (nominal, assuming breakers trip at their rating) can flow into the busbar in any normal operating situation. Is there more to the spirit of 705.12(D)(2)(3) than that?
So do you think the procedure I described meets the intent and spirit of 705.12(D)(2)(3)? And do you see how to express it more simply and clearly?
Cheers,
Wayne
I think the 'spirit' of 705.12(D)(2)(3) is quite a bit different than what you're implying. From what I've gathered, it was put in the code to legitimize solar 'AC combiner' panels, which might also have the occasional related load such as a monitoring device and or weather station. It explicitly removed the requirement for such panels to meet the 120% rule ( 705.12(D)(2)(2)) which was recognized to be overkill for that situation. But I don't think that appealing to 705.12(D)(2)(3) to allow connections in non-dedicated ordinary load centers, where the sum of the load breakers typically exceeds the busbar rating, meets the spirit of that section if it doesn't meet the letter.
Is it a very conservative approach? Yes. That's part of the spirit, too.