No disrespect to the inspectors but, why would it matter what their opinion may be, it is spelled out in the NEC and the laws of physics, you would follow that.
In a two wire circuit both conductors carry the same current, In a single phase MWBC the neutral only carries the imbalance and would not be a CCC. In a three wire MWBC of a wye system, the neutral would carry the same as the ungrounded conductors and would be a CCC. In a four wire MWBC of a wye system the neutral would carry the imbalance and would not be a CCC.
The above is not taking any additive harmonics into consideration which is pretty much overblown anyways.
Roger
I believe you, but I need the argument.
The Art. 100 definition FPN says, "Electronic equipment, electronic/electric discharge lighting, adjustable-speed drive systems, and similar equipment may be non-linear loads."
"May" is subjective, so let's say these loads are, in fact, non-linear. Since even toasters have a circuit board, it is electronic equipment. (Because some minds are thinking this way)
315(B)(4)(c) refers to a major portion of the load being non-linear. Is that 51%? Or does this mean any non-linear load is a problematic consideration. (Because some minds are thinking a 200% neutral with K-factor transformer?)
Sorry, I'm over-exaggerating, but the code seems too offer inspectors an easy argument to compel counting the neutral as a CCC.
So, short of an engineering degree, how can I
underblow the consideration of additive harmonics.