Dsg319
Senior Member
- Location
- West Virginia
- Occupation
- Wv Master “lectrician”
Thanks
Sorry if not relevant but had a scenario come up In my mind. So if I have branch circuits in a home with none being over a hundred feet, Am I still allowed to use the 10ft sleeve and bundle or can only use 10% of the length of circuit conductor?It's the lesser of 10' or 10% of the adjoining length.
So no, not 20' in your example.
And if it's 100' total, then it would be 9', which is 10% of the adjoining 91'.
Cheers, Wayne
Sorry if not relevant but had a scenario come up In my mind. So if I have branch circuits in a home with none being over a hundred feet, Am I still allowed to use the 10ft sleeve and bundle or can only use 10% of the length of circuit conductor?
Thank you.It's 10 ft, or 10% of the remaining length, whichever is less. And if it is 2 ft or less, bundling adjustments need not apply, no matter how long the circuit is, because a different rule excepts the derate requirements.
So if the full length is the following, then up to the following lengths are allowed to have their elevated ampacity ignored.
If the full length is 22ft or less, then it is up to 2ft.
If the full length is 55ft, then it is up to 5ft. 5 ft is 10% of the remaining 50 ft.
If the full length is 99ft, then it is up to 9ft. 9 ft is 10% of the remaining 90 ft.
If the full length is 110 ft, then it is up to 10 ft. This is the overlap where 10 ft coincides with 10%.
If the full length is 220 ft, then it is up to 10 ft. After 10ft is 10%, 10 ft is the limit.
The language in the exception does not say that.It's 10 ft, or 10% of the remaining length, whichever is less. And if it is 2 ft or less, bundling adjustments need not apply, no matter how long the circuit is, because a different rule excepts the derate requirements.
...
Exception:
Where different ampacities apply to portions of a circuit, the higher ampacity shall be permitted to be used if the total portion(s) of the circuit with lower ampacity does not exceed the lesser of 3.0 m (10 ft) or 10 percent of the total circuit.
Ah, that's a 2017 change to 310.15(A)(2) Exception. I guess Carultch and I were out of date. : - )The language in the exception does not say that.
P.S. How does the current language preclude randomly sticking a short length of #12 Cu into any circuit, as long its under 10% and 10ft? Seems like it should say "Where different ampacities apply to portions of a circuit with identical conductor size," or something like that.
Cheers, Wayne
IF you had programming THEN you might call it a bunch of IF-THEN statements.A better way to state that, is that if the termination ampacity is less than the corrected and adjusted conductor ampacity, the termination ampacity governs the ampacity of the circuit.
Think of it like a chain on hooks. The chain has a strength, and the hooks have a strength. The strength of the assembly is the weaker of the two strengths. You can put a stronger chain on the hooks, but you can't take credit for its strength being greater than the strength of the hooks, when determining what load it can support.
They've also changed the allowance to 10 ft of the total circuit. The previous language would have allowed "10' lower ampacity - 200' higher ampacity - 10' lower ampacity" to use the exception on each 10' section separately. [And for an aggressive interpretation, the middle segment could have been only 100', not 200'.]