czars
Czars
- Location
- West Melbourne, FL
- Occupation
- Florida Certified Electrical Contractor
Is there an accepted source for determining ambient temperatures for use with the NEC Article 310.15?
Depending on the Edition, the FPN in 310.15 B(*)(C) Conduits Exposed to Sunlight on Rooftop suggests ASHRAE Handbook ? Fundamentals; however, all the problems charlie b mentioned exist because it is still ill-defined.
I am currently developing a Proposal to use a specific ASHRAE or possibly National Weather Service ?design? percentage. These relate to the percentage of 8660hrs/year the ambient exceeds a specific temperature.
Edit add: "*" above is "2" in the 2008 NEC and "3" in the 2011 NEC.
I don't.There is not. Furthermore, there is not an accepted interpretation regarding the meaning of "ambient". I support the "year-round average" interpretation.
I don't.
You can't rate equipment based on an average annual 10C (50F) when you might have a week of 25C (77F).
You can if you are talking about a conductor's insulation system, and if you apply the Arrhenius Equation using the times, temperatures, and insulation system physical properties. That is the technical basis for my opinion. I note, however, that this has not been incorporated into the NEC, and so therefore it has only the status of an opinion.You can't rate equipment based on an average annual 10C (50F) when you might have a week of 25C (77F).
Well yes, variation between day and night. I've been places where it did get down to 25C at night.I doubt there is a week of 25C (77F). There is day and night, so there is SOME variation even within the day, not to mention week.
If you have to take account of the rate of a chemical reaction.......hmmmYou can if you are talking about a conductor's insulation system, and if you apply the Arrhenius Equation using the times, temperatures, and insulation system physical properties.
Well yes, variation between day and night. I've been places where it did get down to 25C at night.
My point is simpler. The rating of say, and electric motor, is ultimately limited by how hot it gets. Overload it for a period, it will get too hot and insulation failure will be the most likely cause of its demise. How hot depends on ambient temperature all other things being equal. Even if you have a a wide diurnal temperature variation, you still need to take account of the hotter periods.
Most, if not all, electrical equipment is temperature rated.
In UK, we have BS7671 (affectionately known as the electricians bible or just "the regs"). This has tables for conductor current carrying specified at a 30C ambient. There are also tables of correction factors for different ambient temperatures.
The degradation of a conductor's insulation system as a result of elevated temperature is a chemical reaction. My former professor and thesis advisor has done a lot of research on the subject. I even co-authored a paper with him:If you have to take account of the rate of a chemical reaction.......hmmm
A. K. Behera, C. E. Beck, and A. Alsammarae, “Cable Aging Phenomena under Accelerated Aging Conditions,” IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science, vol. 43, no. 3, pp. 1889 - 1893: 1996.
The temperature expressed in degrees is fairly straightforward.What I am looking for is a datum point with two parameters; one is temperature expressed in degrees, the other is the time over which this temperature is integrated.