Hey everyone,
I'm looking for some consensus on a coordination issue regarding NEC 240.4 and conductor derating in a high-fill application.
I want to be clear, I do have an assumption and I think the correct path, but want to not say it to prevent any biases in the responses.
The Setup:
We are applying a diversity derating process that results in a 70% adjustment factor. Starting with a conductor base ampacity of 35A:
35A times 0.70 = 24.5A(Adjusted Ampacity)
The Dilemma:
The adjusted ampacity (24.5A) is sufficient to carry the 15A constant load (meeting the 125% requirement of 18.75A). However, the 30A breaker now exceeds the calculated allowable ampacity of the conductor.
The Questions:
Thanks,
AkulaEE
Electrical Engineer
I'm looking for some consensus on a coordination issue regarding NEC 240.4 and conductor derating in a high-fill application.
I want to be clear, I do have an assumption and I think the correct path, but want to not say it to prevent any biases in the responses.
The Setup:
- Load: 15A Constant Load.
- OCPD: 30A 2-pole breaker.
- Conductors: 26 Current-Carrying Conductors (CCC) in a single raceway.
- Wire Type: XHHW (using 75°C terminations/limitations).
We are applying a diversity derating process that results in a 70% adjustment factor. Starting with a conductor base ampacity of 35A:
35A times 0.70 = 24.5A(Adjusted Ampacity)
The Dilemma:
The adjusted ampacity (24.5A) is sufficient to carry the 15A constant load (meeting the 125% requirement of 18.75A). However, the 30A breaker now exceeds the calculated allowable ampacity of the conductor.
The Questions:
- Does 240.4(B) (the "Next Standard Size" rule) allow the use of a 30A OCPD here since 24.5A is not a standard rating, or does the fact that the OCPD is significantly higher than the adjusted ampacity create a violation?
- In an industrial environment under engineering supervision, would you downsize the breaker to 25A to stay closer to the wire’s adjusted "worth," or is the 30A OCPD considered compliant as long as the load doesn't exceed 24.5A?
- Are there specific concerns regarding the "Small Conductor" rules in 240.4(D) if this happens to be 10 AWG?
Thanks,
AkulaEE
Electrical Engineer