Rob 998
Member
- Location
- Canada/USA
- Occupation
- Controls Engineer
This subject has been beat almost to death before, but there is one distinction I would like everyone's opinion on.
There is a 12AWG Romex, running 240V (on black and white conductors) from the inside load distribution center on a two pole 30A breaker, feeding the required outside disconnecting means, which happens to be fused with 30A time delay fuses. The circuit feeds a single AC unit in a residential setting.
Does use of the fused disconnect, whether or not it was required to provide the rated OCP per the AC unit that the breaker may or may not meet, constitute the final OCPD and now mean that the line from the distribution center to the outside disconnecting means is a feeder, not a branch circuit, and now no longer exempt from the rules allowing smaller conductors in the branch circuit to the AC unit due to the internal thermal overload protection on the AC compressor motor?
Is this a common practice anyways? How serious of a code violation might this be? Construction of this building is mid 80's, North Carolina, whereby I think the use of white for a non-grounded conductor might have been OK, the main question is the feeder vs. branch distinction.
There is a 12AWG Romex, running 240V (on black and white conductors) from the inside load distribution center on a two pole 30A breaker, feeding the required outside disconnecting means, which happens to be fused with 30A time delay fuses. The circuit feeds a single AC unit in a residential setting.
Does use of the fused disconnect, whether or not it was required to provide the rated OCP per the AC unit that the breaker may or may not meet, constitute the final OCPD and now mean that the line from the distribution center to the outside disconnecting means is a feeder, not a branch circuit, and now no longer exempt from the rules allowing smaller conductors in the branch circuit to the AC unit due to the internal thermal overload protection on the AC compressor motor?
Is this a common practice anyways? How serious of a code violation might this be? Construction of this building is mid 80's, North Carolina, whereby I think the use of white for a non-grounded conductor might have been OK, the main question is the feeder vs. branch distinction.