Nathanael47
Member
- Location
- Berkeley, California
- Occupation
- Electrician
I keep on running into teachers and contractors who do correction and adjustment differently. I've bumped into people who say you make temperature corrections from the 90 degree column but adjustments from the 60 degree column (that seems pretty clearly wrong). Others say that you ALWAYS derate from the 90 degree column if your conductor insulation allows it. And finally, I've bumped into people who say that you derate based on the temperature rating of your terminals at either end if they are lower than the conductor insulation rating.
Who is right here?
The sentence that explains this in the code is incredibly confusing and I think it's the thing that has led to all of this disagreement. It's the second paragraph of 310.15(A)
"The temperature correction and adjustment factors shall be permitted to be applied to the ampacity for the temperature rating of the conductor, if the corrected and adjusted ampacity does not exceed the ampacity for the temperature rating of the termination in accordance with 110.14(C)."
I've read that sentence probably 40 times and changed my mind probably 10 times about what it means. But the last 20 or so times I've read it I've become more and more convinced about its meaning: 110.14(C) does NOT change the temperature rating of the conductor, nor does it change the correction and adjustment factors. What does 110.14(C) do? Provide the upper bound for the corrected and adjusted ampacity.
But what happens if the corrected and adjusted ampacity DOES exceed the ampacity for the temperature rating of the termination? What do you apply correction and adjustment factors to then?
Is the implication of 310.15(A) that then instead of applying correction and adjustment factors to the temperature rating of the conductor must be applied to the temperature ratings of the TERMINALS? If that's true then there's an implied sentence -- it would be something like:
"The temperature correction and adjustment factors shall be permitted to be applied to the ampacity for the temperature rating of the conductor, if the corrected and adjusted ampacity does not exceed the ampacity for the temperature rating of the termination in accordance with 110.14(C)." If the corrected and adjusted ampacity does exceed the ampacity for the temperature rating of the termination, then you select ampacity based on the temp rating of the terminal by using 310.16 and that's it - you don't do further temperature correction.
Maaaybe. But I don't see where in the code it tells you to pretend like 310.16 turns into "temperature rating of conductor... or termination"
How does this actually work?
Who is right here?
The sentence that explains this in the code is incredibly confusing and I think it's the thing that has led to all of this disagreement. It's the second paragraph of 310.15(A)
"The temperature correction and adjustment factors shall be permitted to be applied to the ampacity for the temperature rating of the conductor, if the corrected and adjusted ampacity does not exceed the ampacity for the temperature rating of the termination in accordance with 110.14(C)."
I've read that sentence probably 40 times and changed my mind probably 10 times about what it means. But the last 20 or so times I've read it I've become more and more convinced about its meaning: 110.14(C) does NOT change the temperature rating of the conductor, nor does it change the correction and adjustment factors. What does 110.14(C) do? Provide the upper bound for the corrected and adjusted ampacity.
But what happens if the corrected and adjusted ampacity DOES exceed the ampacity for the temperature rating of the termination? What do you apply correction and adjustment factors to then?
Is the implication of 310.15(A) that then instead of applying correction and adjustment factors to the temperature rating of the conductor must be applied to the temperature ratings of the TERMINALS? If that's true then there's an implied sentence -- it would be something like:
"The temperature correction and adjustment factors shall be permitted to be applied to the ampacity for the temperature rating of the conductor, if the corrected and adjusted ampacity does not exceed the ampacity for the temperature rating of the termination in accordance with 110.14(C)." If the corrected and adjusted ampacity does exceed the ampacity for the temperature rating of the termination, then you select ampacity based on the temp rating of the terminal by using 310.16 and that's it - you don't do further temperature correction.
Maaaybe. But I don't see where in the code it tells you to pretend like 310.16 turns into "temperature rating of conductor... or termination"
How does this actually work?