Ben Trueblood
Member
In commercial apps in 120/208 V setting, when am I not allowed to share a neutral between my ungrounded conductors in a conduit. Can I share a neutral if I have receptacle and lighting loads?
simulantenous disconnect applies to ALL multiwire branch circuitsI do not own a 2008 codebook yet. No areas near me are using 2008 at this time. Is it just residential that is affected by the neutral sharing where you must use a multipole breaker if you share?
In commercial apps in 120/208 V setting, when am I not allowed to share a neutral between my ungrounded conductors in a conduit. (?) Can I share a neutral if I have receptacle and lighting loads?
You can not share neutrals when the ungrounded conductors are of the same phase or leg, as this would double up the amperage carried on the neutral instead of canceling it out.
Example: (Simplified)
?A = 10A
?B = 10A
?C = 10A
Neutral current = 0
?A = 10A
?A = 10A
?A = 10A
Neutral current = 30A
Lites and recepts - sure share away - so long as any dimmed lighting does not say not to, most that would would be from panels anyway, usually not the simple wall-box type.
The use of a common neutral does not have any effect on the circuit creating unwanted harmonics. The only issue is that is some rare cases, the harmonic currents can add and over load a common neutral.All commercial jobs i ever did already has panel schedule. If you alter this its up to the ahj to accept or not. Do you really want tie handles between lighting and receptacles. And you also create unwanted harmonics by mixing. I would avoid if at all within reason.
I've heard that before, and don't understand the problem. Why would a dimmer in line with each line conductor be any different than a switch so wired?Lites and recepts - sure share away - so long as any dimmed lighting does not say not to, most that would would be from panels anyway, usually not the simple wall-box type.
I've heard that before, and don't understand the problem. Why would a dimmer in line with each line conductor be any different than a switch so wired?
I think he is talking about dimmer panels not dimmers for device boxes.
Many dimmer panels specify two wire circuits on the load side but I see no reason for it other then they ask for it.
Harmonics on the neutral.