monkey said:So when a service gets re located sometimes the only choice is over the roof (from the meter to the panel).
iwire said:Good question and I do not see it addressed.
It does strike me that as this table is limited to dwelling units that the cable would not be exposed to high ambient temps.
tallgirl said:Come to Texas. Ambient attic temperatures come summer can easily exceed 55C / 135F and it can be that hot all the way down to the top of the joists, much less up in the ridges where people here run powered attic vents.
tallgirl said:Come to Texas. Ambient attic temperatures come summer can easily exceed 55C / 135F
iwire said:I am not a fan of Table 310.15(B)(6) anyway, if the NEC knows these size cables are fine because the service calcs are to conservative than the service calcs should be changed to become more accurate and not so inflated.
I don't that is the case here. In the other cases where the OCPD is sized larger than the conductor ampacity, the OCPD is only providing short circuit and ground fault protection for the conductors, the overload protection is provided at the load end of the conductors by another device. The numbers in 310.15(B)(6) are based on actual residential loads as seen by the utilities and is based on utility numbers from many years ago. The reason it works without problems is the fact that Bob stated....the calcuations in Article 220 are very conservative and resulted in an inflated load calculation.I believe that service calculations should give two separate numbers: OCPD trip rating and minimum circuit ampacity. There are many situations where the OCPD trip rating is permitted to exceed the ampacity of the conductors protected; 310.15(B)(6) implies that this is the case for residential services, why not make this explicit.
don_resqcapt19 said:Jon,
I don't that is the case here. In the other cases where the OCPD is sized larger than the conductor ampacity, the OCPD is only providing short circuit and ground fault protection for the conductors, the overload protection is provided at the load end of the conductors by another device.
Don
Pierre C Belarge said:If you have more than 3 current carrying conductors (based on your OP), than Table 310.15(B)(6) is not to be used.
The 80% is for the "more than 3 CCC" and if you are using a 90C rated conductor, than your temp correction factor would be an additional 87% based on your OP.
Pierre C Belarge said:The first sentence in my last post is absolutely correct.
Where in the code do we see the wording that gives us relief from using the temperature correction table under 310.16?
