If it's NM ~ no.fireryan said:Is it permisible to put 8awg on a 50 amp bkr.
fireryan said:It seems you always put a 8 on a 40amp bkr even though it is good for 55amps when using thhn.
fireryan said:It seems you always put a 8 on a 40amp bkr even though it is good for 55amps when using thhn.
celtic said:If it's NM ~ no.
It would limited to 40A [60? col.]
See 334.80
celtic said:Couple of things...
If it's NM ~ no.
It would limited to 40A [60? col.]
See 334.80
Not really...a #8 CU THHN is actually only good for 50A [75? col.]
See 110.14(C)[/quote]
There are conditions that are part of 110.14(C)(a), read this one:
110.14(C)(1)(a)(3).
celtic said:Couple of things...
Dennis Alwon said:If it is an a/c load it may be okay to be on a 60 amp breaker.
art. 240.4 (G) and art. 440.22 always us to go 175% and sometimes 225% of the branch circuit.A/A Fuel GTX said:Rationale?
A/A Fuel GTX said:Agreed but just wondering where the 60A came from. If the FLA of an A/C unit was 50A, we could use an OCPD of 90A and still use #8THHN's........correct?
A/A Fuel GTX said:... and the OCPD to the maximum fuse size.....
GeorgeB said:CAREFUL here ... fuses and circuit breakers are different. If it says fuses, it means, usually, FUSES. If it matters there will probalby be a specification on the fuses.
Dennis Alwon said:I have not seen an a/c unit that says fuses only in many many years. Of course I don't do commercial work so I am talking resi stuff here.