rubydew02
New member
- Location
- Sidney, Oh, USA
What is the defintion of a current carring conducter and do you count a neutral as a current carrie
What is the defintion of a current carring conducter and do you count a neutral as a current carrie
What is the defintion of a current carring conducter and do you count a neutral as a current carrie
what dennis said, along with control wires. ps to be in the same raceway the control wire conductor's insulation has to be rated at 600V
This is general information on the subject.
In a 2 wire 120V branch circuit the neutral is a current carrying conductor (CCC). In a single phase panel where you have a multiwire branch circuit (MWBC) then the neutral only carries the unbalanced load between the phases so the neutral is not considered a CCC simply because the 3 wire circuit will never carry more than what the 2 hot conductors are capable of carrying.
Say we have a single phase system and you run a MWBC to receptacles. This circuit has the capacity of 20 amps per phase. If one phase draws 10 amps and the other draws 18 amps then the neutral draws 18-10 or 8 amps. If both draw 20 amps the neutral draws 0. In no case will the total amp draw be more than the 20 amps on both ungrounded conductors, thus the neutral does not count.
Now if you have a 3 phase system with a 4 wire MWBC then the neutral does not count either. If it is 3 phase and you have only a 3 wire MWBC then the neutral counts.
Things change with nonlinear loads such as fluorescents lights, etc.
It is certainly is clear that the code says that a neutral in a MWBC is not counted as current carrying. However, to use the 20 amp example if none phase is carrying 20 amps and the other is carrying 0, then the neutral is carrying 20 amps. So, my question is: why should the neutral not be considered a CCC?
It is certainly is clear that the code says that a neutral in a MWBC is not counted as current carrying. However, to use the 20 amp example if none phase is carrying 20 amps and the other is carrying 0, then the neutral is carrying 20 amps. So, my question is: why should the neutral not be considered a CCC?
Neutrals do carry current however they carry no more than the 3 non grounded conductors together. Read this thread from our FAQ's and see if that helps.
Seems to me that every inspector believes that every wire counts as a current carrying conductor except the grounding wire.
Seems to me that every inspector believes that every wire counts as a current carrying conductor except the grounding wire.