I see a lot of installations like such - 12-#10 Copper THHN CCC in 1” Conduit for 120V 20A Branch Circuits. For this purpose let’s say the loads on these 120V circuits are for general purpose receptacles and FCUs with a 20A max nameplate OCPD rating and a RLA of 10A lets say )
From what I gather, a lot of guys derate the #10 THHN from the 90Degree column @ 50% for the 10-20CCC and that equates to a final ampacity rating of 20A - and that math works at that point.
However, and please correct me if my understanding is wrong. But you must derate @ the weakest link amongst the circuit - which comes to be the termination points. Most terminals on 20A Breaker, 20A receptacle, the terminals inside the 20A FCU are rated at 75degrees. Those 12-#10 THHN derated @ 50% in the 75degree column is roughly 17.5A now.
I may be wrong but I think - going back to those specific loads I stated above - because the FCU is a fixed-load, the above installation would be NEC/NYC compliant. But the general purpose receptacle circuits would not be. The general purpose circuits/conductors feeding that circuit, must be able to handle the full 20A load. Therefore whichever of those 12-CCC are feeding the general purpose receptacles must be placed on a 15A breaker to become compliant.
From what I gather, a lot of guys derate the #10 THHN from the 90Degree column @ 50% for the 10-20CCC and that equates to a final ampacity rating of 20A - and that math works at that point.
However, and please correct me if my understanding is wrong. But you must derate @ the weakest link amongst the circuit - which comes to be the termination points. Most terminals on 20A Breaker, 20A receptacle, the terminals inside the 20A FCU are rated at 75degrees. Those 12-#10 THHN derated @ 50% in the 75degree column is roughly 17.5A now.
I may be wrong but I think - going back to those specific loads I stated above - because the FCU is a fixed-load, the above installation would be NEC/NYC compliant. But the general purpose receptacle circuits would not be. The general purpose circuits/conductors feeding that circuit, must be able to handle the full 20A load. Therefore whichever of those 12-CCC are feeding the general purpose receptacles must be placed on a 15A breaker to become compliant.