Mightymite47
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- Rustburg,va.
I'm having a hard time understanding the requirements when feeding a motor from a jbox,disconnect or vfd to a motor to size the wire.How is tap rule applied?Any help would be appreciated. Thanks
There are more circumstances involved in sizing conductors for motors is it a.
Branch circut?
Feeder?
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I'm having a hard time understanding the requirements when feeding a motor from a jbox,disconnect or vfd to a motor to size the wire.How is tap rule applied?Any help would be appreciated. Thanks
I'm having a hard time understanding the requirements when feeding a motor from a jbox,disconnect or vfd to a motor to size the wire.How is tap rule applied?Any help would be appreciated. Thanks
Tap rule would be a situation where you "tap" from a feeder and end up in an overcurrent device to protect the branch circuit on the load side of that device.
Say you ran a 100 amp feeder across the plant to an area where you had a group of motors. Near those motors you maybe place a gutter or splice box and make taps to that 100 amp feeder to several 30 amp fused disconnects each to supply a motor circuit of 30 amps or less.
Tap rule covers any conductor between the feeder and each overcurrent device that has lesser ampacity then the feeder.
See 240.21(B)
Yes.More specifically, IMHO, it covers any situation where a conductor (other than a service conductor) is protected at its rated ampacity only at the downstream end rather than at the upstream end.
More specifically, IMHO, it covers any situation where a conductor (other than a service conductor) is protected at its rated ampacity only at the downstream end rather than at the upstream end.
It is in 430.72. There is still overcurrent protection requirements, it just relaxes the general rules for those control circuits. In such cases you just have a few VA of a load being supplied (contactor coil in many cases) so overloading isn't really a concern, but they still want short circuit/ground fault protection level that isn't so high that the control conductor ends up being the fuse link.For completeness, there are some "tap rules" in 430 where one can use a tap for the control wiring. I would have to look, its been a while, but I don't think those require any protection. The protection is they are short and don't leave the enclosure.