Re: Conductors for General Use
jsinclair, I design 48 and 24 VDC battery plants and the distribution systems. Voltage drop is the most important factor in these systems. You can use 310.16 for minimum cable sizes, but I do not use it other than a safety check. I use voltage drop. In battery plants, the batteries in most cases do not have OCPD's, so 310.16 is of no use.
I use the following formula:
CM=(22.2 * I * D)/VD
Where
CM = Circular Mills
I = Max load current
D = One way cable distance
VD = Voltage Drop
I use 22.2 which is equal to 2 * 11.1 (K for copper) I find 12.9 is too high a value, 11.1 is used as an industry standard.
Voltage drop is the tricky part. 2 volts is the standard for 48 VDC, and 1 for 24 VDC. What makes it tricky is the distribution system is divided into separate sections.
For example; a typical 48 VDC battery plant you have three sections of distribution.
1. Batteries to Charge Buss = .25 VDC
2. Main Power Board (primary feeder distribution) to Breaker Bay (secondary branch distribution) = .5 VDC
3. Breaker Bay to equipment loads (branch circuits) = 1.25 VDC
For a 24 VDC plant these values are cut in half. If you use the voltage drop method the conductors will always be larger than 310.16 requirements unless you are using very short distances. So always double check.
For example in breaker bays the smallest breaker we use is a 20-amp breaker, and the smallest conductor we use with it is a 6 AWG.
That's about it except for grounding, but that is a subject for another day.